Hospital-Based Surveillance of Rotavirus and Other Viral Agents of Diarrhea in Children and Adults in Russia, 2005-2007

During a 2-year period in 2005–2007, we conducted surveillance of group A rotaviruses and other enteric agents among patients hospitalized with acute gastroenteritis in 8 different cities of the Russian Federation. Fecal specimens were gathered from 3208 children (including 2848 children aged <5...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of Infectious Diseases
Main Authors: Podkolzin, A. T., Fenske, E. B., Abramycheva, N. Yu, Shipulin, G. A., Sagalova, O. I., Mazepa, V. N., Ivanova, G. N., Semena, A. V., Tagirova, Z. G., Alekseeva, M. N., Molochny, V. P., Parashar, U. D., Vinjé, J., Maleev, V. V., Glass, R. I., Pokrovsky, V. I.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2009
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Online Access:http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/200/Supplement_1/S228
https://doi.org/10.1086/605054
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Summary:During a 2-year period in 2005–2007, we conducted surveillance of group A rotaviruses and other enteric agents among patients hospitalized with acute gastroenteritis in 8 different cities of the Russian Federation. Fecal specimens were gathered from 3208 children (including 2848 children aged <5 years) and 1354 adults who were admitted to hospitals in Moscow, St. Petersburg, Chelyabinsk, Nizhnii Novgorod, Tyumen, Khabarovsk, Makhachkala, and Yakutsk. Polymerase chain reaction was performed to detect rotaviruses of groups A and C, noroviruses of genogroups I and II, astrovirus, sapovirus, and enteric adenoviruses (group F). Group A rotavirus was the most common viral pathogen detected among children aged <5 years (43.6%), followed by norovirus (12.5%), whereas norovirus was the pathogen most commonly detected in adults (11.9%). P and G genotypes were determined for 515 rotavirus specimens, and the most prevalent genotypes were G1P[8] (44.9%), G4P[8] (40.0%), G2P[4] (8.5%), and G3P[8] (6.6%). This study is the first multicenter study of rotaviruses in the Russian Federation and documents the important burden of disease caused by this pathogen, which soon may be preventable by vaccination