Immune Response of Infants and Children to Low-Passage Bovine Rotavirus (Strain WC3)
- 1 April 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine
- Vol. 140 (4) , 350-356
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archpedi.1986.02140180084030
Abstract
• A bovine rotavirus (strain WC3) was isolated from a calf in Pennsylvania and adapted to growth in continuous Cercopithecus cell line CV1. A pool for human vaccine trials was produced at the 12th cell culture passage level. After preliminary testing in adults and older children, a dose of 3×107 plaque-forming units was given by mouth to 52 infants and children aged 5 months to 6 years. No clinical sequelae were detected, and shedding in feces was detected in only 30% of tested infants. A serum-neutralizing antibody response was induced in 95% of 21 infants aged 5 to 11 months; response rates were slightly reduced in older infants. The antibody response was primarily directed toward bovine rotavirus, but a response to human serotype 3 rotavirus was also observed in approximately 50% of vaccinees. After vaccination with WC3, infants with preexisting antibody to rotaviruses of human serotype 1 or 3 frequently exhibited a booster response to those serotypes. WC3 is a candidate rotaviral vaccine deserving larger trials in children. (AJDC 1986;140:350-356)This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
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