Concomitant Use of the Oral Pentavalent Human-Bovine Reassortant Rotavirus Vaccine and Oral Poliovirus Vaccine
- 1 October 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
- Vol. 27 (10), 874-880
- https://doi.org/10.1097/inf.0b013e3181782780
Abstract
The live oral pentavalent rotavirus vaccine (PRV) is well tolerated and highly efficacious against rotavirus gastroenteritis. This open-label, multicenter study evaluated the immunogenicity and safety of coadministering oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) with PRV. From 2005 to 2006, healthy 6- to 12-week-old Latin American infants were randomized to PRV and OPV concomitantly or PRV 2-4 weeks before OPV. Three doses of each vaccine were administered 8-10 weeks apart. Subjects did not receive OPV at birth. Routine licensed pediatric vaccines were allowed. Antibody responses to PRV and OPV were evaluated 42 days after the last dose of each vaccine. Adverse events were recorded for 14 days after each study visit. In the concomitant-use group (n = 372), more than 98% of subjects achieved serum-neutralizing antibody titer > or = 1:8 against poliovirus types 1, 2, and 3. The poliovirus seroprotection rate in the concomitant-use group was statistically noninferior to the staggered-use group (n = 363). The immunoglobulin A (IgA) antirotavirus geometric mean titer was 46% lower in the concomitant-use group than in the staggered-use group. However, concomitant use elicited a > or = 3-fold increase (from predose 1 to postdose 3) in serum antirotavirus IgA in 93% of subjects and achieved the definition of noninferiority. Both regimens were similarly well tolerated. PRV did not interfere with immune responses to OPV. Although coadministration with OPV reduced serum antirotavirus IgA geometric mean titer, seroresponse rates were high and consistent with those observed in previous studies showing high vaccine efficacy. These results support including PRV in vaccination schedules involving OPV.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Concomitant Use of an Oral Live Pentavalent Human-Bovine Reassortant Rotavirus Vaccine With Licensed Parenteral Pediatric Vaccines in the United StatesThe Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 2007
- Efficacy, Immunogenicity, and Safety of a Pentavalent Human-Bovine (WC3) Reassortant Rotavirus Vaccine at the End of Shelf LifePediatrics, 2007
- Effects of the potency and composition of the multivalent human-bovine (WC3) reassortant rotavirus vaccine on efficacy, safety and immunogenicity in healthy infantsVaccine, 2006
- Safety and Efficacy of a Pentavalent Human–Bovine (WC3) Reassortant Rotavirus VaccineNew England Journal of Medicine, 2006
- Serum Antibody as a Marker of Protection against Natural Rotavirus Infection and DiseaseThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2000
- Serologic Correlates of Immunity in a Tetravalent Reassortant Rotavirus Vaccine TrialThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1997
- Concurrent Oral Poliovirus and Rhesus-Human Reassortant Rotavirus Vaccination: Effects on Immune Responses to Both Vaccines and on Efficacy of Rotavirus VaccinesThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1996
- Simultaneous administration of oral rhesus-human reassortant tetravalent (RRV-TV) rotavirus vaccine and oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) in Thai infantsVaccine, 1995
- TRIAL OF AN ATTENUATED BOVINE ROTAVIRUS VACCINE (RIT 4237) IN GAMBIAN INFANTSThe Lancet, 1987
- Combined vaccination with live oral polio vaccine and the bovine rotavirus RIT 4237 strainVaccine, 1986