Intussusception, Rotavirus Diarrhea, and Rotavirus Vaccine Use Among Children in New York State

Abstract
Objective. To describe epidemiologic features of intussusception and rotavirus diarrhea in New York, to examine the baseline incidence and trends over time, and to ascertain whether an excess of cases occurred in the 9 months of vaccination with the newly licensed rotavirus vaccine. Methods. Hospital discharge data from 1989 through 1998 were reviewed for children (n = 3) was lower than expected using the NIP estimate of excess risk (1.8) among rotavirus vaccinated children (n = 12) but not significantly different from the risks identified in the NIP cohort studies (1 in 12 000). Conclusion. Our data suggest that in New York the rate of intussusception has declined, and approximately 1 child in 2600 develops intussusception before 1 year of age. The different seasonality between intussusception and rotavirus-related hospitalizations suggests that if any causal association exists, it must be small. Unlike other studies, analysis of New York hospitalized discharge data failed to show an appreciable increase in the incidence of intussusception after introduction of the rotavirus vaccine.