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Rotavirus genotypes in children under five years hospitalized with diarrhea in low and middle-income countries: Results from the WHO-coordinated Global Rotavirus Surveillance Network.

Sebastien AntoniTomoka NakamuraAdam L CohenJason M MwendaGoitom WeldegebrielJoseph N M BieyKeith ShabaGloria Rey-BenitoLucia Helena de OliveiraMaria Tereza da Costa OliveiraClaudia OrtizAmany GhoniemKamal FahmyHossam A AshmonyDovile VidebaekDanni DanielsRoberta PastoreSimarjit SinghEmmanuel TondoJayantha B L LiyanageMohammed SharifuzzamanVarja GrabovacNyambat BatmunkhJosephine LogronioGeorge ArmahFrancis Ekow DennisMapaseka SeheriNonkululeko MagagulaJeffrey MphahleleJose Paulo G LeiteIrene T AraujoTulio Machado FumianHanan El MohammadyGalina SemeikoElena SamoilovichSidhartha GiriGagandeep KangSarah ThomasJulie E BinesCarl D KirkwoodNa LiuDeog-Yong LeeMirren Iturriza-GomaraNicola Anne PageMathew D EsonaM Leanne WardCourtnee N WrightSlavica Mijatovic-RustempasicJacqueline E TateUmesh D ParasharJon GentschMichael D BowenFatima Serhan
Published in: PLOS global public health (2023)
Rotavirus is the most common pathogen causing pediatric diarrhea and an important cause of morbidity and mortality in low- and middle-income countries. Previous evidence suggests that the introduction of rotavirus vaccines in national immunization schedules resulted in dramatic declines in disease burden but may also be changing the rotavirus genetic landscape and driving the emergence of new genotypes. We report genotype data of more than 16,000 rotavirus isolates from 40 countries participating in the Global Rotavirus Surveillance Network. Data from a convenience sample of children under five years of age hospitalized with acute watery diarrhea who tested positive for rotavirus were included. Country results were weighted by their estimated rotavirus disease burden to estimate regional genotype distributions. Globally, the most frequent genotypes identified after weighting were G1P[8] (31%), G1P[6] (8%) and G3P[8] (8%). Genotypes varied across WHO Regions and between countries that had and had not introduced rotavirus vaccine. G1P[8] was less frequent among African (36 vs 20%) and European (33 vs 8%) countries that had introduced rotavirus vaccines as compared to countries that had not introduced. Our results describe differences in the distribution of the most common rotavirus genotypes in children with diarrhea in low- and middle-income countries. G1P[8] was less frequent in countries that had introduced the rotavirus vaccine while different strains are emerging or re-emerging in different regions.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • magnetic resonance
  • gene expression
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • machine learning
  • artificial intelligence
  • big data
  • liver failure
  • irritable bowel syndrome
  • candida albicans
  • copy number