Korean J Pediatr Infect Dis.  2008 May;15(1):5-10. 10.14776/kjpid.2008.15.1.5.

Clinical ep idemiologic profile of rotavirus infections in Korea

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Korea. kjhan@olmh.cuk.ac.kr

Abstract

Primary rotavirus gastroenteritis infection usually occurs in infants under 2 years of age worldwide regardless of level of hvgiene, quality of water, food or sanitation or type of behavior. In Korea, the diseases mostly occurred in infants under 2 years old, and usually in late fall to early winter with the highest incidence shown in November until early 1990s. However, since then, relatively the age incidence of this infection has increased in children over 2 years old, and it has mainly occurred in late winter to early spring with the highest incidence shown between February and March. And rotavirus gastroenteritis serotypes varied year to year as well as varied by year within the same region in our country. The comparison of severity scores between age groups in Korea showed that severity score was lowest in infants less than 3 months and highest in infants more than 6 months and less than 12 months, and hospitalization period between age groups was longest in infants older than 3 months and less than 6 months, In this aspect, rotavirus vaccines should be given to infants less than 2 years of age in whom the incidence of rotavirus gastroenteritis is the highest, and vaccination should be ideally started before 3 months considering hospitalization period and severity of rotavirus gastroenteritis. However, It should be careful for the introduction of new rotavirus vaccine, and the effectiveness of rotavirus Vaccines should be assessed by long-term post marketing surveillance. And we guess a multivalent vaccine may be an ideal rotavirus vaccine to prevent primary infection caused by variable rotavirus strains in Korea. In addition, clinical epidemiology studies on rotavivus gastroenteritis which evluate the age and serotypes related severity should be continuously conducted in various regions.

Keyword

Rotavirus; Vaccine; Epidemiology

MeSH Terms

Child
Epidemiology
Gastroenteritis
Hospitalization
Humans
Incidence
Infant
Korea*
Marketing
Rotavirus Infections*
Rotavirus Vaccines
Rotavirus*
Sanitation
Serogroup
Vaccination
Water
Rotavirus Vaccines
Water
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