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Reactogenicity and safety of the human rotavirus vaccine, Rotarix™ in the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and India: A post-marketing surveillance study

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Date
2014-08
Author
Bravo, Lulu
Chitraka, Amarjeet
Liu, Aixue
Choudhury, Jaydeep
Kumar, Kishore
Berezo, Lennie
Cimafranca, Leonard
Chatterjee, Pallab
Garg, Pankaj
Siriwardene, Prasanna
Bernardo, Rommel
Mehta, Shailesh
Balasubramanian, Sundaram
Karkada, Naveen
Htay Han, Htay
MeSH term
Rotavirus Infections MeSH
Vaccines MeSH
Humans MeSH
Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions MeSH
Rotavirus Vaccines MeSH
Vaccination MeSH
Geographic name
Philippines
Sri Lanka
India
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Abstract
Regulatory bodies in the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and India require post-marketing surveillance to provide additional safety data on Rotarix™ in real-life settings. In such studies conducted in the Philippines (November 2006 to July 2012; NCT00353366), Sri Lanka (November 2008 to August 2009; NCT00779779), and India (August 2009 to April 2010; NCT00938327), 2 doses of Rotarix™ were administered according to the local prescribing information (PI). The occurrence of at least Grade “2”/”3” solicited adverse event (AE) (fever, vomiting, or diarrhea), within 15 days in the Philippines or 8 days in Sri Lanka and India; unsolicited AEs within 31 days and serious adverse events (SAEs) throughout the study were recorded. Of the 1494, 522, and 332 infants enrolled in The Philippines, Sri Lanka, and India, 14.7% 14.9% and 12.7% infants, respectively recorded at least Grade “2”/”3” solicited AEs. The most commonly reported solicited AEs were irritability in the Philippines (32.2% post-Dose-1; 23.5% post-Dose-2) and India (23.0% post-Dose-1; 13.2% post-Dose-2), and fever (18.0% post-Dose-1; 20.2% post-Dose-2) in Sri Lanka. Unsolicited AEs were recorded in 24.5% (the Philippines), 4.8% (Sri Lanka), and 6.9% (India) of infants. Forty-one SAEs were recorded in the Philippines of which 6 (decreased oral intake with increased sleeping time and constipation; pneumonia, urinary tract infection, and intussusception) were considered by the investigators as causally related to vaccination. One vaccine-unrelated SAE occurred in a Sri Lankan infant. All SAEs resolved and the infants recovered. Two doses of Rotarix™, administered to healthy infants according to local PI, were well tolerated in the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and India.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14353/359
Recommended Citation
Bravo, L., Chitraka, A., Liu, A., Choudhury, J., Kumar, K., Berezo, L., ... & Htay Han, H. (2014). Reactogenicity and safety of the human rotavirus vaccine, Rotarix™ in the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and India: A post-marketing surveillance study. Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics, 10(8), 2276-2283.
DOI
10.4161/hv.29280
Type
Article
ISSN
2164-5515; 2164-554X
Keywords
Safety Tolerance Vaccinology Infectious disease Reactogenicity Prescribing information Rotarix™ Rotavirus infections Bronchopneumonia Rotavirus vaccine Antibiotic agent Asthma Bronchiolitis Post-marketing surveillance Human vaccine
Subject
Vaccines OCLC - FAST (Faceted Application of Subject Terminology) Vaccination of infants OCLC - FAST (Faceted Application of Subject Terminology) Clinical trials OCLC - FAST (Faceted Application of Subject Terminology) Drugs--Testing OCLC - FAST (Faceted Application of Subject Terminology) Immunization of infants OCLC - FAST (Faceted Application of Subject Terminology) Rotaviruses OCLC - FAST (Faceted Application of Subject Terminology) Gastroenteritis in children OCLC - FAST (Faceted Application of Subject Terminology)
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