Efficacy of a quadrivalent rhesus rotavirus-based human rotavirus vaccine aimed at preventing severe rotavirus diarrhea in infants and young children. Kapikian, A Z, Hoshino, Y, Chanock, R M, & Pérez-Schael, I The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 174 Suppl 1:S65–72, September, 1996.
Efficacy of a quadrivalent rhesus rotavirus-based human rotavirus vaccine aimed at preventing severe rotavirus diarrhea in infants and young children [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
The most extensively explored strategy for rotavirus vaccination has been the Jennerian approach, which uses an antigenically related rotavirus strain from an animal host as the immunogen to induce protection against the 4 epidemiologically important group A rotavirus VP7 serotypes. Because this approach has shown limited efficacy, a modified Jennerian approach was developed with the goal of achieving broader antigenic coverage. Four VP7 serotypes were incorporated into a quadrivalent vaccine comprised of three rhesus-human rotavirus reassortants, each with 10 rhesus rotavirus genes and 1 human rotavirus gene that encodes VP7 serotype 1, 2, or 4 specificity; the rhesus rotavirus itself provides coverage for VP7 serotype 3. This approach appears quite promising for preventing severe rotavirus diarrhea, including those episodes that lead to dehydration. Additional strategies under development stress the role not only of human rotavirus VP7 but also of human rotavirus VP4, the other outer capsid protein that also induces neutralizing antibodies.
@article{kapikian_efficacy_1996,
	title = {Efficacy of a quadrivalent rhesus rotavirus-based human rotavirus vaccine aimed at preventing severe rotavirus diarrhea in infants and young children},
	volume = {174 Suppl 1},
	issn = {0022-1899},
	url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8752293},
	abstract = {The most extensively explored strategy for rotavirus vaccination has been the Jennerian approach, which uses an antigenically related rotavirus strain from an animal host as the immunogen to induce protection against the 4 epidemiologically important group A rotavirus VP7 serotypes. Because this approach has shown limited efficacy, a modified Jennerian approach was developed with the goal of achieving broader antigenic coverage. Four VP7 serotypes were incorporated into a quadrivalent vaccine comprised of three rhesus-human rotavirus reassortants, each with 10 rhesus rotavirus genes and 1 human rotavirus gene that encodes VP7 serotype 1, 2, or 4 specificity; the rhesus rotavirus itself provides coverage for VP7 serotype 3. This approach appears quite promising for preventing severe rotavirus diarrhea, including those episodes that lead to dehydration. Additional strategies under development stress the role not only of human rotavirus VP7 but also of human rotavirus VP4, the other outer capsid protein that also induces neutralizing antibodies.},
	urldate = {2011-10-15},
	journal = {The Journal of Infectious Diseases},
	author = {Kapikian, A Z and Hoshino, Y and Chanock, R M and Pérez-Schael, I},
	month = sep,
	year = {1996},
	pmid = {8752293},
	pages = {S65--72},
}

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