The effect of diarrhea on oral poliovirus vaccine failure in Brazil

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Abstract

The effect of diarrhea on oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) failure was evaluated using data from Brazil, where 728 infants were immunized at birth (OPVI) and ~6 (OPV2), 10 (OPV3), and 14 (OPV4) weeks. Recent diarrhea history was significantly associated with increased vaccine failure only after OPV2 for poliovirus types 2 and 3. In multivariate models, controlling for breast feeding, season of vaccine administration (type 3 only), maternal antibody (type 3 only), and immunization campaign exposure (type 3 only) strengthened this effect. Diarrhea at OPV receipt was associated with vaccine failure to poliovirus types 1 and 3 only after OPV2. These data support the current recommendation that children with diarrhea receive OPV and be reimmunized once their illness resolves. Expanding this recommendation to include children with a recent diarrhea history should be considered. While the effect of diarrhea on vaccine failure may be limited to OPV2, programmatic realities may preclude dose-specific recommendations.

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APA

Posey, D. L., Linkins, R. W., Oliveria, M. J. C., Monteiro, D., & Patriarca, P. A. (1997). The effect of diarrhea on oral poliovirus vaccine failure in Brazil. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 175(2 SUPPL.). https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/175.supplement_1.s258

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