Abstract

Vaccination is the most effective preventive strategy against rotavirus disease. Regional differences in prevalent rotavirus genotypes may affect vaccine efficacy. Pre-vaccine surveillance for burden of rotavirus disease, prevalent rotavirus genotypes, and association between rotavirus disease and intussusceptions helps in monitoring the impact of vaccination. A prospective study was conducted from January 2008 to December 2009 in children younger than five years hospitalized for longer than 24 hours with acute gastroenteritis. Data on confirmed cases of intussusception were collected retrospectively. Stools were tested by enzyme immunoassay, reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and nucleotide sequencing. Acute gastroenteritis (AGE) caused 13.1% (2,147/16,348) of hospitalizations among children under five years. Stools were tested for 50.2% (1077/2147) of AGE cases. Of these, 49% (528/1077) were rotavirus positive. Rotavirus gastroenteritis, non-rotavirus gastroenteritis, and intussusceptions were most prevalent in children under 15 months [80.3%, 74% and 91% respectively]. Rotavirus was detected from more than 60% of acute gastroenteritis cases during peak months. The prevalence of intussusception showed no seasonal pattern. The peak ages of six to twelve months for acute gastroenteritis and five to eight months for intussusception overlapped. G1, G2 and mixed G/P genotypes were common in the isolated rotaviruses. Rotavirus gastroenteritis causes significant morbidity in children younger than five years of age in Ghana. Although the peak age of rotavirus gastroenteritis and intussusceptions overlapped, there was no seasonal correlation between them. The high prevalence of mixed G/P genotypes in Ghanaian children may affect the effectiveness of vaccination.

Highlights

  • Vaccination is the most effective preventive strategy against rotavirus disease

  • We report on the prevalence of severe rotavirus Acute gastroenteritis (AGE), common rotavirus genotypes, and intussusceptions in Ghanaian children younger than five years old

  • None of the five years hospitalized for AGE were less than 15 children whose stools were collected for the study months old

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Vaccination is the most effective preventive strategy against rotavirus disease. Regional differences in prevalent rotavirus genotypes may affect vaccine efficacy. Results: Acute gastroenteritis (AGE) caused 13.1% (2,147/16,348) of hospitalizations among children under five years. The high prevalence of mixed G/P genotypes in Ghanaian children may affect the effectiveness of vaccination. Rotavirus is the most common cause of acute gastroenteritis (AGE) in children younger than five years of age worldwide. Rotavirus causes about 30-50% of diarrheal diseases in young children and the prevalence of severe rotavirus disease has remained high [3,4] despite improvements in sanitation. An explanation for this may be that improved hygienic practices and oral rehydration therapy have resulted in a greater decline of hospitalization from bacterial and parasitic diarrheal diseases than hospitalization from rotavirus disease [5,6]. Vaccination is considered the most effective public health strategy to reduce rotavirus disease burden [7]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call