The unusual genotype combination G9-P[4]-I2-E6 was noted in the remaining 2 strains. The key to develop targeted care or prevention strategies is to recognise the pathogens causing disease in different age groups. Based on surveillance for RV disease and strains, RV vaccines have been recommended in national immunisation programmes, worldwide [23]. A few studies have reported indirect protection of adults by vaccination in the paediatric population [10]. However, more studies are required to compare
the RV strains circulating 3-MA in vivo in children and adults, and to understand the effects on infections in adults as a result of herd immunity due to vaccine introduction in children. The study, although conducted over 5 years, on a relatively limited number of cases each year, showed an overall decline in the frequency of RV infections in adolescents and adults during 2008–2012 (9.4%) as compared to an earlier report (16.9%) in a similar group of patients [15]. It may be noted that the prevalence of RV among adults declined from 4.4%
in 2006–2007 to 2.3% in 2008–2010 in USA, suggesting an indirect protection of adults by paediatric rotavirus vaccination [10]. It may not be possible to explain the decline in the RV infections observed in the present study on I-BET-762 order the similar basis as only 9.7% of the paediatricians in India have reported routine administration of RV vaccines [24] and the vaccines are not in the public vaccination programme. Similar to the studies reported in the 2000s in Brazil, Ireland, India and US [4], [11], [15], [25], [26] and [27],
G2P[4] strains were found to be the common strains in adolescent and adult patients in the present study. These results, however, differed from those found in children from the same region and period (2009–2012) from India describing G1P[8], G2P[4] and G9P[8] strains as the most common types and the emergence of G9P[4] and G12 P[6]/P[8] strains (under communication) and worldwide [28] and [29]. either Interestingly, an uncommon genotype combination G9P[4] was detected in the years 2010 and 2011, a finding similar to that described recently in children from Latin America [30], Africa [28], Bangladesh [29], Kerala [31] and also from Pune, India (under communication). Among the other commonly circulating RV strains, G1P[8] was detected only in 2009. Our earlier RV surveillance study [15] conducted for the period from 2004–2007 in adolescents and adults from the same region has documented almost equal similar contribution of nontypeable (11.6%) and mixed (13.9%) RV strains in causing gastroenteritis. Surprisingly, none of the patients with gastroenteritis in the present study were detected to have mixed rotavirus infection. This may be attributed to the decline in the rate of RV infection as well as diversity in rotavirus strains noted in the present study as compared to that reported earlier [15].