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1.
Rev. panam. salud pública ; 3(5): 326-336, mayo 1998. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-466219

ABSTRACT

Se evaluó la inocuidad, inmunogenicidad y eficacia de una vacuna tetravalente obtenida por recombinación genética de rotavirus aislados de monos rhesus y seres humanos (RRV-TV) (4 x 104 unidades formadoras de placas por dosis) en un ensayo prospectivo, aleatorio, a doble ciego y controlado con placebo que se efectuó con 540 lactantes brasileños. Se administraron dosis de vacuna o de placebo a la edad de 1, 3 y 5 meses. No se observaron diferencias significativas en la frecuencia de diarrea o vómito en los bebés de ninguno de los dos grupos después de administrar la dosis correspondiente. De 2 a 3% de los vacunados tuvieron fiebre baja los días tercero a quinto después de recibir la primera dosis, pero no después de las dosis segunda o tercera. Se observó una respuesta de anticuerpos del tipo IgA al rotavirus aislado de monos rhesus (RRV) en 58% de los vacunados y en 33% de quienes recibieron placebo. La respuesta de anticuerpos neutralizantes a cada serotipo no pasó de 20% cuando se determinó con la prueba de reducción de focos de fluorescencia, pero fue superior a 40% al medirse con la prueba de neutralización a base de reducción de placas. Se presentaron 91 casos de diarrea causada por rotavirus entre los niños que recibieron las tres dosis (de vacuna o de placebo) durante un seguimiento de 2 años, 36 de ellos en los niños vacunados. La eficacia general de la vacuna fue de 8% (P = 0,005) contra toda clase de diarrea y de 35% (P = 0,03) contra la diarrea causada por rotavirus. La protección durante el primer año de seguimiento, cuando predominó el rotavirus G del serotipo 1, fue de 57% (P = 0,008), pero se redujo a 12% en el segundo año. Se obtuvieron resultados similares al restringir el análisis a episodios en que el rotavirus fue el único agente patógeno identificado. Se observó en la vacuna una mayor tendencia a proteger contra casos de enfermedad con un promedio de seis o más deposiciones diarias. Estos resultados son lo suficientemente...


A tetravalent rhesus-human reassortant rotavirus (RRV-TV) vaccine (4 x 104 plaque-forming units/dose) was evaluated for safety, immunogenicity and efficacy in a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial involving 540 Brazilian infants. Doses of vaccine or placebo were given at ages, 1, 3 and 5 months. No significant differences were noted in the occurrence of diarrhoea or vomiting in vaccine and placebo recipients following each dose. Low-grade fever occurred on days 3­5 in 2­3% of vaccinees after the first dose, but not after the second or third doses of vaccine. An IgA antibody response to rhesus rotavirus (RRV) occurred in 58% of vaccinees and 33% of placebo recipients. Neutralizing antibody responses to individual serotypes did not exceed 20% when measured by fluorescent focus reduction, but exceeded 40% when assayed by plaque reduction neutralization. There were 91 cases of rotavirus diarrhoea among the 3-dose (vaccine or placebo) recipients during two years of follow-up, 36 of them among children given the vaccine. Overall vaccine efficacy was 8% (P = 0.005) against any diarrhoea and 35% (P = 0.03) against any rotavirus diarrhoea. Protection during the first year of follow-up, when G serotype 1 rotavirus predominated, was 57% (P = 0.008), but fell to 12% in the second year. Similar results were obtained when analysis was restricted to episodes in which rotavirus was the only identified pathogen. There was a tendency for enhanced protection by vaccine against illness associated with an average of 6 or more stools per day. These results are sufficiently encouraging to warrant further studies of this vaccine in developing countries using a higher dosage in an attempt to improve its immunogenicity and efficacy.


Subject(s)
Rotavirus Vaccines/immunology , Immunogenicity, Vaccine/genetics , Immunogenicity, Vaccine/immunology , Brazil
2.
In. Leäo, Raimundo Nonato Queiroz de; Bichara, Cléa Nazaré Carneiro; Miranda, Esther Castello Branco Mello; Carneiro, Irna Carla do Rosário de Souza; Abdon, Nagib Ponteira; Vasconcelos, Pedro Fernando da Costa; Silva, Bibiane Monteiro da; Paes, Andréa Luzia Vaz; Marsola, Lourival Rodrigues. Doenças Infecciosas e Parasitárias: Enfoque Amazônico. Belém, Cejup:Universidade do Estado do Pará:Instituto Evandro Chagas, 1997. p.107-12, ilus, mapas.
Monography in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-248918
3.
In. Leäo, Raimundo Nonato Queiroz de; Bichara, Cléa Nazaré Carneiro; Miranda, Esther Castello Branco Mello; Carneiro, Irna Carla do Rosário de Souza; Abdon, Nagib Ponteira; Vasconcelos, Pedro Fernando da Costa; Silva, Bibiane Monteiro da; Paes, Andréa Luzia Vaz; Marsola, Lourival Rodrigues. Doenças Infecciosas e Parasitárias: Enfoque Amazônico. Belém, Cejup:Universidade do Estado do Pará:Instituto Evandro Chagas, 1997. p.449-68.
Monography in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-248939
4.
In. Leäo, Raimundo Nonato Queiroz de; Bichara, Cléa Nazaré Carneiro; Miranda, Esther Castello Branco Mello; Carneiro, Irna Carla do Rosário de Souza; Abdon, Nagib Ponteira; Vasconcelos, Pedro Fernando da Costa; Silva, Bibiane Monteiro da; Paes, Andréa Luzia Vaz; Marsola, Lourival Rodrigues. Doenças Infecciosas e Parasitárias: Enfoque Amazônico. Belém, Cejup:Universidade do Estado do Pará:Instituto Evandro Chagas, 1997. p.475-85.
Monography in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-248941
5.
In. Leäo, Raimundo Nonato Queiroz de; Bichara, Cléa Nazaré Carneiro; Miranda, Esther Castello Branco Mello; Carneiro, Irna Carla do Rosário de Souza; Abdon, Nagib Ponteira; Vasconcelos, Pedro Fernando da Costa; Silva, Bibiane Monteiro da; Paes, Andréa Luzia Vaz; Marsola, Lourival Rodrigues. Doenças Infecciosas e Parasitárias: Enfoque Amazônico. Belém, Cejup:Universidade do Estado do Pará:Instituto Evandro Chagas, 1997. p.507-24, tab, graf.
Monography in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-248943
6.
In. Leäo, Raimundo Nonato Queiroz de; Bichara, Cléa Nazaré Carneiro; Miranda, Esther Castello Branco Mello; Carneiro, Irna Carla do Rosário de Souza; Abdon, Nagib Ponteira; Vasconcelos, Pedro Fernando da Costa; Silva, Bibiane Monteiro da; Paes, Andréa Luzia Vaz; Marsola, Lourival Rodrigues. Doenças Infecciosas e Parasitárias: Enfoque Amazônico. Belém, Cejup:Universidade do Estado do Pará:Instituto Evandro Chagas, 1997. p.554-78, tab, graf.
Monography in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-248946
7.
Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz ; 90(6): 743-9, Nov.-Dez. 1995. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-158742

ABSTRACT

Faecal samples were obtained from 190 children, aged 0 to 5 years, admitted to a public hospital in Belém, Pará, Brazil. These patients were placed in a pediatric ward with 40 beds distributed in six rooms. Case were classified into three groups: (a) nosocomial: children who developed gastroenteritis 72 hr or later after admission; (b) community-acquired: patients admitted either with diarrhoea or who had diarrhoea within 72 hr following admission; (c) non-diarrhoeic: those children who had no diarrhoea three days before and three days after collection of formed faecal sample. Specimens were routinely processed for the presence of rotaviruses, bacteria and parasites. Rotaviruses were detected through enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and subsequently serotyped/electrophoretyped. Rotaviruses were the most prevalent enteropathogens among nosocomial cases, accounting for 39 porcento (9/23) of diarrhoeal episodes; on the other hand, rotaviruses ocurred in 8.3 por cento (11/133) and 9 por cento (3/34) of community-acquired and non-diarrhoeic categories, respectively. Mixed infections involving rotavirus and Giardia intestinalis and rotavirus plus G. intestinalis and Entamoeba histolytica were detected in frequencies of 8.6 and 4.3 por cento, respectively, in the nosocomial group. The absence of bacterial pathogens in this category, and the unusual low prevalence of these agents in the other two groups may reflect the early and routine administration of antibiotics following admission to this hospital. Rotavirus serotype 2 prevailed over the other types, accounting for 77.8 por cento of isolates from nosocomial diarrhoeal episodes. In addition, at least five different genomic profiles could be observed, of which one displayed an unusual five-segment first RNA cluster. Dehydration was recorded in all cases of hospital-acquired, rotavirus-associated diarrhoea, whereas in only 57 por cento of nosocomial cases of other aetiology. It was also noted that nosocomial, rotavirus-associated diarrhoeal episodes ocurr earlier (7 days), following admission, if compared with those hospital-acquired cases of other aetiology (14 days).


Subject(s)
Humans , Child , Diarrhea, Infantile , Rotavirus , Rotavirus Infections
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