Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2403356 Vaccine 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Of the estimated half-million deaths from rotavirus globally each year, approximately one-third (N = 160,000 deaths) occur in the Indian subcontinent (defined as India, Bangladesh, and Pakistan). Two commercial vaccines are available for use and recommended by WHO, although the prohibitive vaccine price has limited their introduction into routine childhood immunization programs. New rotavirus vaccines are in late clinical development, including two advanced candidates in India. As significant shifts in rotavirus strain diversity have occurred in the past three decades and questions remain regarding whether strain replacement may occur following introduction of rotavirus vaccines, it is important to understand the temporal and regional strain diversity profile before vaccine introduction. We reviewed 33 peer-reviewed manuscripts from the Indian subcontinent and found that the most common G-types (G1–4) and P-types (P[4] and P[8]) globally accounted for three-fourths of all strains in the subcontinent. However, strains varied by region, and temporal analysis showed the decline of G3 and G4 in recent years and the emergence of G9 and G12. Our findings underscore the large diversity of rotavirus strains in the Indian subcontinent and highlight the need to conduct surveillance on a regional scale to better understand strain diversity before and after rotavirus vaccine introduction.

► We have conducted a systematic review of rotavirus strain diversity in India over three decades. ► Strain diversity in South east Asia is high with novel strains, newly emerging strains and zoonotic strains in circulation. ► Strains differ across time intervals, but also regionally across the region during the same time period.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Immunology
Authors
, , , , ,