Global Estimates Of Rotavirus Vaccine Efficacy And Effectiveness: A Rapid Review And Meta-Regression Analysis
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eClinicalMedicine
Abstract
Background Rotavirus is the leading cause of diarrhoea worldwide, particularly affecting young children. While na tional rotavirus immunization programs have reduced rotavirus morbidity and mortality, vaccine performance varies
considerably between high-income and low-income settings.
Methods We updated a previous systematic review of studies reporting rotavirus vaccine efficacy and vaccine
effectiveness against severe rotavirus-associated gastroenteritis (RVGE) by performing a rapid review from July 1,
2020 through October 16, 2024. We included randomized controlled trials reporting vaccine efficacy against severe
RVGE and case-control and cohort studies reporting vaccine effectiveness against hospitalization with RVGE in
children <5 years old for current internationally licensed vaccines. We developed a meta-regression model for
vaccine efficacy and effectiveness using widely available country-specific predictors of rotavirus vaccine
performance and simultaneously estimated the relationship between vaccine efficacy and effectiveness. We used
the model to predict vaccine efficacy and effectiveness for all countries and assessed its predictive accuracy using
a modified leave-one-country-out validation approach.
Findings Predicted vaccine efficacy ranged from 69.6% to 94.3% across countries in the Americas, European, and
Western Pacific Regions, with a decreased efficacy ranging from 18.6% to 85.3% in the African, South-East Asian,
and Eastern Mediterranean regions. Estimates of vaccine effectiveness were generally lower than vaccine efficacy
when efficacy was greater than 60%, but effectiveness was predicted to be higher when vaccine efficacy was low.
A strong correlation (r = 0.63) was found between the observed and predicted vaccine efficacy and effectiveness,
with 98.2% of observed efficacy and effectiveness estimates falling within the 95% prediction intervals.
Interpretation Our approach enhances the understanding of global variation in rotavirus vaccine performance and can
be used to inform predictions of the potential impact of rotavirus vaccines for countries that have yet to introduce
them. Higher-quality data on predictor variables and broader regional representation in vaccine trials are required for
more robust vaccine performance estimates.
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Research Article
Citation
Prunas, O., Asare, E. O., Sajewski, E., Li, Y., Pithawala, Z., Weinberger, D. M., ... & Pitzer, V. E. (2025). Global estimates of rotavirus vaccine efficacy and effectiveness: a rapid review and meta-regression analysis. EClinicalMedicine, 81.
