Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2403033 Vaccine 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We compared study designs to find the effectiveness of pentavalent rotavirus vaccine.•Study designs included were the case-control design and the case-cohort design.•Three doses of vaccine were found to be 92% effective in each analysis.•Two doses of vaccine were found to be from 79% to 83% effective.•Both designs found the vaccine highly effective when the vaccine series is completed.

The objective of this study is to determine the vaccine effectiveness (VE) of the pentavalent rotavirus vaccine (RV5) for preventing rotavirus-related hospitalizations and emergency department (ED) visits during the 2006–07 and 2007–08 rotavirus seasons using two study designs. Active, prospective population-based surveillance was conducted to identify cases of laboratory-confirmed rotavirus-related hospitalizations and ED visits to be used in case-cohort and case-control designs. VE was calculated using one comparison group for the case-cohort method and two comparison groups for the case-control method. The VE estimates produced by the three analyses were similar. Three doses of RV5 were effective for preventing rotavirus-related hospitalizations and ED visits in each analysis, with VE estimated as 92% in all three analyses. Two doses of RV5 were also effective, with VE ranging from 79% to 83%. A single dose was effective in the case-cohort analysis, but was not significant in either of the case-control analyses. The case-cohort and the case-control study designs produced the same VE point estimates for completion of the three dose series. Two and three doses of RV5 were effective in preventing rotavirus-related hospitalizations and ED visits.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Immunology
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