High prevalence of rotavirus infection among neonates born at hospitals in Delhi, India: predisposition of newborns for infection with unusual rotavirus

Cicirello, Helen G. ; Das, Bimal K. ; Gupta, Aarti ; Bhan, M. K. ; Gentsch, Jon R. ; Kumar, Ramesh ; Glass, Roger I. (1994) High prevalence of rotavirus infection among neonates born at hospitals in Delhi, India: predisposition of newborns for infection with unusual rotavirus Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 13 (8). pp. 720-723. ISSN 0891-3668

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Official URL: http://journals.lww.com/pidj/Abstract/1994/08000/H...

Abstract

Although rotavirus is the most common cause of diarrhea in children older than 3 months of age, neonatal infections, which are asymptomatic, have rarely been surveyed and have been identified in only a few discrete nosocomial outbreaks. After such a nosocomial outbreak of rotavirus infection among newborns at a hospital in Delhi, we screened infants born at five other nurseries in the immediate area to assess the prevalence of neonatal infections and to determine whether the unique neonatal rotavirus strain, 116E, previously identified in Delhi, was present in other settings. Infection was documented in 43 to 78% of hospitalized infants between 4 and 6 days of life born at five of the six hospitals. Infection with strains related to 116E were the most common, but other unusual strains and no strains common in the community were detected. In addition a shift in genotype was observed among specimens collected from two of these hospitals during a 2-year period. Our observation that neonatal rotavirus infections are more common than recognized previously would encourage the administration of rotavirus vaccines during the newborn period and suggests that the low efficacy of vaccines observed during trials in developing countries may be caused by early natural exposure of infants before immunization. The extraordinary predisposition of neonates for unusual rotavirus strains not commonly found in the community should encourage others to screen neonates for this infection, characterize the strains more fully and attempt to understand at a molecular level the unique relationship between the infecting strain type and the age of the host.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society.
Keywords:Rotavirus; Neonatal Rotavirus; Rotavirus Vaccine; Epidemiology
ID Code:2453
Deposited On:07 Oct 2010 11:25
Last Modified:16 May 2011 11:44

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