SUMMARY Between July 2009 and June 2011, rotavirus was detected in 507 of 4597 episodes of acute gastroenteritis in children aged <3 years in Gipuzkoa (Basque Country, Spain), of which the G-type was determined in 458 (90.3%). During the annual seasonal epidemic of 2010-2011, the unusual G-type 12 was predominant, causing 65% (145/223) of cases of rotavirus gastroenteritis. All the G12 strains were clustered in lineage III and were preferentially associated with P-type 8. This epidemic was characterized by broad geographical distribution (rural and urban) and, over 7 months, affected both infants and children, the most frequently affected being children between 4 and 24 months. Of children with rotavirus G12, 16% required hospital admission, the admission rate in children aged <2 years being 20.7 cases/10 000 children. The sudden emergence and predominance of G12 rotaviruses documented in this winter outbreak suggest that they may soon become a major human rotavirus genotype. Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012.
CITATION STYLE
Cilla, G., Montes, M., Gomariz, M., Alkorta, M., Iturzaeta, A., Perez-Yarza, E. G., & Perez-Trallero, E. (2013). Rotavirus genotypes in children in the Basque Country (North of Spain): Rapid and intense emergence of the G12[P8] genotype. Epidemiology and Infection, 141(4), 868–874. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268812001306
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