PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Incidence of intussusception before and after the introduction of rotavirus vaccine in Korea.

  • Hye-Kyung Cho,
  • Se Hwan Hwang,
  • Hye Na Nam,
  • Kyungdo Han,
  • Bongsung Kim,
  • Insik Kong,
  • Kwangsuk Park,
  • Jaeyoung Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238185
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 8
p. e0238185

Abstract

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BackgroundRecent studies have reported that after the introduction of rotavirus vaccine the incidence of intussusception did not change among infants, or slightly increased at the age immediately after the first dose. The rotavirus vaccines were introduced in Korea for private market use in 2007-2008. We investigated the incidence of intussusception before (2002-2006) and after (2009-2015) the vaccine introduction in Korea.MethodsWe conducted an interrupted time series study that used data from the Korean National Health Insurance database to identify infants (ResultsThe annual incidences in infants have decreased over time from 241.7 per 100,000 infants (pre-vaccine period) to 160.1-205.2 per 100,000 infants (post-vaccine period). The incidence rate ratio during the post-vaccine period ranged from 0.66 to 0.85. The incidences of intussusception in all three infant age groups have decreased in post-vaccine period compared to pre-vaccine period (incidence rate ratio range: 0.31-0.65, 0.47-0.75, and 0.68-0.94 in 6-14, 15-24, and 25-34 weeks, respectively).ConclusionsThe incidence of intussusception in infants did not increase after the rotavirus vaccine introduction in Korea, but rather decreased over the past decades. Since the incidence of intussusception varies according to country or region, continuous monitoring the incidence of intussusception in infants is necessary in each county or region.