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.
How have rotavirus vaccines worked in
developing countries in Latin America?
Brendan Flannery,
Pan American Health Organization, Brazil and
Lúcia De Oliveira, Immunization Unit/FCH, Washington, DC
9th International Rotavirus Symposium,
Johannesburg, South Africa, August 2-3, 2010
How have rotavirus vaccines worked in
developing countries in the Americas
Political support
Rotavirus surveillance network
Disease burden and cost effectiveness
Vaccine introduction
Impact of vaccination
Special studies
Lessons learned
Political support
Pan American Health Organization’s (PAHO)
Regional Immunization Program
Reduce inequities in health between resourcewealth and resource poor countries
Political commitment, technical, operational and
financial support
Providing new and underutilized vaccines to
the children and families who need them
Resolution by Ministers of Health,
PAHO Directing Council meeting in 2006
Support WHO’s Global Immunization Vision and
Strategy and the Millennium Development Goals
Resolve to mobilize additional funding to sustainably
introduce new vaccines against rotavirus,
pneumococcal and human papillomavirus
Of 20 countries with highest under 5 mortality,
13 have introduced rotavirus vaccines
Latin American countries on track to meet MDG4
Financing immunization programs
National support for EPI: 93% is financed by
governments
Vaccine price, PAHO’s Revolving Fund, 2009:
Rotarix: US$ 7.50 /dose, $15 /child
RotaTeq: US$ 5.50 /dose, $16.5 /child
Rotavirus vaccine represents 97.3% of the cost of
the basic immunization schedule of countries (OPV,
DPT, Hib, HepB, MMR)
GAVI countries: Bolivia and Honduras approved by
GAVI, Guyana financed on its own
Rotavirus surveillance network
PAHO Guidelines
• Field guide “Epidemiologic
surveillance of Diarrheal
diseases due to rotavirus”
• Field guide on
“Introduction of New
Vaccines” based on WHO
Guidelines
Countries participating in
rotavirus surveillance
network
Percent rotavirus-positive samples from
children <5 hospitalized for diarrhea in
participating countries, 2006-2007
De Oliveira, Rotavirus Surveillance in Latin American and Caribbean, JID 2009
Seasonality of hospitalizations for rotavirus in
participating countries, 2006–2007
Northern
hemisphere
Southern
hemisphere
De Oliveira, Rotavirus Surveillance in Latin American and Caribbean, JID 2009
Disease burden and cost
effectiveness
Causes of death among children <5
years in the Americas, 2008
Black et al., Lancet, 12 May 2010
Estimates of rotavirus disease burden
in the Region of the Americas
15,000 deaths
75,000 hospitalizations
2 million clinic visits
10 million cases of rotavirus diarrhea
Source: De Oliveira, Expert Rev. Vaccines, 2008
Cost-effectiveness
Introduction of new vaccines needs to be
grounded in evidence that they are cost
effective:
PRO-VAC: 5 years strategic plan
to strengthen national capacity to make
evidence-based decisions for new
vaccines
http://new.paho.org/provac/
Vaccine introduction
Rotavirus vaccine introduction
Latin American countries : first countries
to introduce rotavirus vaccine in public
health sector: March 2006 in Panama
As of May 2010, 14 countries and one
territory had introduced rotavirus vaccine:
13 - Rotarix (GSK)
2 - RotaTeq (Merck)
16
10000
14
9000
8000
12
7000
10
6000
8
5000
6
4000
3000
4
2000
2
1000
0
0
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
Children <1 year (thousands)
Number of countries
Introduction of rotavirus vaccines in Latin
America, 2006-2010
Countries and total population <1 year
Latin America and Caribbean
countries with rotavirus vaccines
into their routine schedules
Age in weeks at vaccination,
Nicaragua and Brazil
RotaTeq, Nicaragua
Dose 1
Rotarix, Brazil
Dose 2
Dose 3
Comparison of first dose coverage for RotaTeq
vs. DPTDPT-HepBHepB-Hib
Hib,, Nicaragua, 2007
(RotaTeq introduced October 2006)
Orozco et al., Uptake of rotavirus vaccine, Nicaragua, JID 2009
Rotavirus and DPT coverage for 8 Latin
American countries, 2009
100
90
% coverage
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Source: Country reports
RV2/3
DTP3
Impact of vaccination
Diarrhea and rotavirus related admissions
among children <5 years at seven hospitals,
El Salvador, January to June,* 2006-2009
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