Diversity of Rotavirus Strains among Children with Acute Diarrhea in China: 1998-2000 Surveillance Study

Author:

Fang Zhao-Yin1,Yang Hui1,Qi Jin1,Zhang Jing1,Sun Li-Wei2,Tang Jing-Yu3,Ma Li4,Du Zeng-Qing5,He Ai-hua6,Xie Jian-Ping7,Lu Yi-Yu8,Ji Zhen-Zhou9,Zhu Bao-Quan10,Wu Hai-Yan11,Lin Si-En1,Xie Hua-Ping1,Griffin Dixie D.12,Ivanoff Bernard13,Glass Roger I.12,Gentsch Jon R.12

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Virology, Chinese Academy of Preventive Medicine, Beijing

2. and Beijing Friendship Hospital,

3. Lulong Anti-epidemic Station, Qinhuangdao

4. Changchun Children's Hospital, Changchun

5. Kunming Children's Hospital, Kunming

6. Fujian Anti-epidemic Station, Fuzhou

7. Guangzhou Children's Hospital, Guangzhou

8. Zhejiang Anti-epidemic Station, Hangzhou

9. Zhengzhou Children's Hospital, Zhengzhou

10. Lanzhou Medical College, Lanzhou

11. Sichuan Anti-epidemic Station, Chengdu, China

12. Viral Gastroenteritis Section, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia

13. Department of Vaccines and Biologicals, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland

Abstract

ABSTRACT As part of a national rotavirus surveillance activity, we collected fecal specimens from 3,177 children with acute diarrhea in 10 regions of China between April 1998 and April 2000 and screened them for rotavirus. Rotavirus was detected in 41% ( n = 1,305) of specimens, and in these, G1 was the predominant serotype (72.6%), followed by G3 (14.2%), G2 (12.1%), G4 (2.5%), G9 (0.9%), and G untypeable (0.7%). Among 327 G-typed strains tested for P genotype, 14 different P-G combinations were identified, with the globally common strains P[8]G1, P[4]G2, P[8]G3, and P[8]G4 representing 75.6% of all typed rotavirus strains. Among the uncommon strains, 11 were P[6]G9, and others included P[6]G1, P[6]G3, and five novel P-G combinations (P[9]G1, P[4]G1, P[4]G3, P[4]G4, and P[8]G2). Our results indicate that while the common rotavirus strains remain predominant, the diversity of strains is much greater than was previously recognized.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Microbiology (medical)

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