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Oral polio vaccine response in breast fed infants with malnutrition and diarrhea
Authors:Rashidul Haque  Cynthia Snider  Yue Liu  Jennie Z. Ma  Lei Liu  Uma Nayak  Josyf C. Mychaleckyj  Poonum Korpe  Dinesh Mondal  Mamun Kabir  Masud Alam  Mark Pallansch  M. Steven Oberste  William Weldon  Beth D. Kirkpatrick  William A. Petri Jr.
Affiliation:1. International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Dhaka, Bangladesh;2. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA;3. Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA;4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA;5. University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont, USA
Abstract:
Oral vaccines for polio (OPV) and rotavirus are less effective in children in the developing world. The reasons for this are not well understood. We tested for risk factors for poor response to OPV in infants from an urban slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh. Diminished serum neutralizing response to OPV, but not failure of intramuscularly administered vaccines, was associated with malnutrition, diarrhea, and shorter breastfeeding duration. Children with malnutrition (WAZ <−2) had significantly lower OPV 3 titers (p = 0.029). Children who had 2 or more diarrhea episodes during the 1st months of life were more than twice as likely to experience OPV failure as those who had 1 diarrhea episode or no diarrhea (p = 0.0245). In contrast, each additional month in exclusive breastfeeding was associated with an increase in OPV 3 titer by 0.41 (p = 0.0072) and 0.16 (p = 0.0065) at the 25th and 50th percentiles of OPV 3 titers respectively. These data are consistent with a defect in induction of immunity in the gut for OPV but not parenteral vaccines, a defect that may be amenable to intervention in part via promotion of exclusive breastfeeding.
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