4.4 Article

Rotavirus vaccines performance: dynamic interdependence of host, pathogen and environment

Journal

EXPERT REVIEW OF VACCINES
Volume 20, Issue 8, Pages 945-957

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14760584.2021.1951247

Keywords

Efficacy; effectiveness; rotavirus vaccine; vaccine performance

Categories

Funding

  1. GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals SA

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This article reviews factors related to the human host, rotavirus pathogen, and environment that lead to diminished vaccine performance in resource-limited settings. Addressing limiting factors for vaccine efficacy is necessary but may take a long time. Increasing immunization coverage is an immediate solution to reduce the prevalence of rotavirus disease.
Introduction As of January 2021, rotavirus vaccination programs have been implemented in 109 countries and their use has resulted in a positive impact on rotavirus-related diarrheal hospitalizations and mortality in children below 5 years of age. Despite these successes, several countries in Africa and Asia where disease burden is high have not yet implemented rotavirus vaccination at all or at a scale sufficient enough to demonstrate impact. This could be, among other reasons, due to poor vaccine coverage and the modest levels of efficacy and effectiveness of the vaccines in these resource-limited settings. Areas covered We review various factors related to the human host (malnutrition, maternally derived antibodies and breastfeeding, genetic factors, blood group, and co-administration with oral polio vaccine), rotavirus pathogen (force of infection, strain diversity and coinfections), and the environment (related to the human microbiome) which reflect complex and interconnected processes leading to diminished vaccine performance in resource-limited settings. Expert opinion Addressing the limiting factors for vaccine efficacy is needed but likely to take a long time to be resolved. An immediate solution is to increase the immunization coverage to higher values generating an overall effect of adequate proportion of protected population to reduce the prevalence of rotavirus disease.

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