A new vaccine for rotavirus, which causes
diarrhea and vomiting in children, was licensed by the Food and Drug
Administration in April. The vaccine advisory committee agreed that the second
vaccine should be added to the list of recommended vaccines for infants.
The two-dose vaccine made by
GlaxoSmithKline and the three-dose vaccine made by Merck & Co. which was
approved in 2006 are given orally to prevent rotavirus. The highly contagious
virus causes more than 400,000 doctors visits, up to 270,000 trips to the
emergency room, up to 70,000 hospitalizations and 20 to 60 deaths in the United States. Worldwide,
about 1,600 children under 5 die from the infection each year.
Lab tests for the Merck vaccine, Rota Teq, showed
that it prevents 74% of all rotavirus infections, 98 % of severe infections and
about 96% of hospitalizations. Merck & Co.’s RotaTeq was introduced in the United States
for routine vaccination of 2 months, 4 months and 6 months children, the
Washington Post noted.
“The changes appear to be greater than
expected based on the protective effects of the vaccine alone,” said Dr. Anne
Schuchat, director of the National
Center for Immunization
and Respiratory Diseases at the CDC. “It is also possible the current levels of
vaccination may be helping to decrease the spread of rotavirus to unvaccinated
individuals in the community,” Schuchat said in a statement.
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