Norovirus infection and acquired immunity in 8 countries: Results from the MAL-ED study
Genre
Journal ArticleDate
2016-05-15Author
Rouhani, SPeñataro Yori, P
Paredes Olortegui, M
Siguas Salas, M
Rengifo Trigoso, D
Mondal, D
Bodhidatta, L
Platts-Mills, J
Samie, A
Kabir, F
Lima, AAM
Babji, S
Mason, CJ
Kalam, A
Bessong, P
Ahmed, T
Mduma, E
Bhutta, ZA
Lima, I
Ramdass, R
Lang, D
George, A
Zaidi, AKM
Kang, G
Houpt, E
Kosek, MN
Brett, N
Acosta, AM
De Burga, RR
Chavez, CB
Flores, JT
Olotegui, MP
Pinedo, SR
Salas, MS
Trigoso, DR
Vasquez, AO
Ahmed, I
Alam, D
Ali, A
Qureshi, S
Rasheed, M
Soofi, S
Turab, A
Bose, A
Hariraju, D
Jennifer, MS
John, S
Kaki, S
Karunakaran, P
Koshy, B
Lazarus, RP
Muliyil, J
Raghava, MV
Raju, S
Ramachandran, A
Ramadas, R
Ramanujam, K
Roshan, R
Sharma, SL
Shanmuga Sundaram, E
Thomas, RJ
Pan, WK
Ambikapathi, R
Carreon, JD
Charu, V
Doan, V
Graham, J
Hoest, C
Knobler, S
McCormick, BJJ
McGrath, M
Miller, MA
Mohale, A
Nayyar, G
Psaki, S
Rasmussen, Z
Richard, SA
Seidman, JC
Wang, V
Blank, R
Gottlieb, M
Tountas, KH
Amour, C
Bayyo, E
Mvungi, R
Nshama, R
Pascal, J
Swema, BM
Yarrot, L
Ahmed, AS
Haque, R
Hossain, I
Islam, M
Mahfuz, M
Tofail, F
Chandyo, RK
Shrestha, PS
Shrestha, R
Ulak, M
Bauck, A
Subject
diarrheaimmunity
norovirus
Caliciviridae Infections
Child, Preschool
Cohort Studies
Diarrhea
Feces
Humans
Incidence
Infant
Infant, Newborn
Norovirus
Permanent link to this record
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/5070
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Show full item recordDOI
10.1093/cid/ciw072Abstract
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. Background. Norovirus is an important cause of childhood diarrhea. We present data from a longitudinal, multicountry study describing norovirus epidemiology during the first 2 years of life. Methods. A birth cohort of 1457 children across 8 countries contributed 7077 diarrheal stools for norovirus testing. A subset of 199 children contributed additional asymptomatic samples (2307) and diarrheal stools (770), which were used to derive incidence rates and evaluate evidence for acquired immunity. Results. Across sites, 89% of children experienced at least 1 norovirus infection before 24 months, and 22.7% of all diarrheal stools were norovirus positive. Severity of norovirus-positive diarrhea was comparable to other enteropathogens, with the exception of rotavirus. Incidence of genogroup II (GII) infection was higher than genogroup I and peaked at 6-11 months across sites. Undernutrition was a risk factor for symptomatic norovirus infection, with an increase in 1 standard deviation of length-for-age z score associated with a 17% reduction (odds ratio, 0.83 [95% confidence interval,. 72-.97]; P =. 011) in the odds of experiencing diarrhea when norovirus was present, after accounting for genogroup, rotavirus vaccine, and age. Evidence of acquired immunity was observed among GII infections only: Children with prior GII infection were found to have a 27% reduction in the hazard of subsequent infection (hazard ratio, 0.727; P =. 010). Conclusions. The high prevalence of norovirus across 8 sites in highly variable epidemiologic settings and demonstration of protective immunity for GII infections provide support for investment in vaccine development.Citation to related work
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http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/5052