Rotavirus vaccination as a public health strategy to reduce the burden of hospitalization: The field experience of Italy (2008−2018)

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Abstract

Rotavirus (RV) infection is a leading cause of severe diarrhea among children younger than 5 years old and a considerable cause of RV gastroenteritis (RVGE) hospitalization. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of vaccination in Italy in the reduction of the burden of RV-related disease, estimating the relation between vaccination coverage and hospitalization rates. RVGE-related hospitalizations that occurred in Italy from 2008 to 2018 among children aged 0−35 months were assessed by consulting the Hospital Discharge Record database and including records whose ICD-9-CM diagnosis code was 008.61 in the first or in any diagnosis position. In the 2008−2018 period, a total of 17 535 791 at-risk person-years were considered and 74 211 (423.2 cases × 100 000 per year) RVGE hospitalizations were observed. Higher hospitalization rates occurred in males (456.6 vs. 387.9 × 100 000 per year) and in children aged 1 year (507.8 × 100 000 per year). Poisson regression analysis showed a decrease of −1.25% in hospitalization rates (−1.19% to −1.31%, p < 0.001) per unit increase in vaccination coverage. This is the first study that correlates hospitalization rate reduction with a percentage increase in vaccination coverage. Our findings strongly support RV vaccination as an effective public health strategy for reducing RVGE-related hospitalizations.

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APA

Amodio, E., D’Anna, A., Verso, M. G., Leonforte, F., Genovese, D., & Vitale, F. (2023). Rotavirus vaccination as a public health strategy to reduce the burden of hospitalization: The field experience of Italy (2008−2018). Journal of Medical Virology, 95(8). https://doi.org/10.1002/jmv.29000

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