Incidence of hospitalization due to community-acquired rotavirus infection: A 12-year study (1996-2008)

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Abstract

The incidence of hospitalization for acute gastroenteritis (AGE) is a useful parameter to assess the utility of the new rotavirus vaccines in high-income countries. Children hospitalized for AGE were identified by searching hospital discharge data and the records of the microbiology laboratory of Hospital Donostia. Rotavirus antigen was investigated in 961% of the 1114 children aged 1 month to <5 years hospitalized for AGE in the study period. Nearly 40% were rotavirus positive (449% of the 798 children aged 1 month to <2 years), with G1[P8] being the predominant genotype. The mean annual incidence rate of hospitalization due to rotavirus AGE was 298 and 637 cases/10 000 inhabitants in the <5 and <2 years age groups, respectively, in 1996-1999, decreasing to 136 and 274 cases/10 000 inhabitants in <5 and <2 years age groups, respectively, in 2002-2005 (P<0001). This decrease coincided with a significant increase in the consumption of oral rehydration solutions. Copyright © 2010 Cambridge University Press.

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APA

Cilla, G., Gomariz, M., Montes, M., Mendiburu, M. I., Pérez-Yarza, E. G., & Pérez-Trallero, E. (2010). Incidence of hospitalization due to community-acquired rotavirus infection: A 12-year study (1996-2008). Epidemiology and Infection, 138(9), 1235–1241. https://doi.org/10.1017/S095026881000004X

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