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Prolonged Excretion of Poliovirus Among Individuals With Primary Immunodeficiency Disorder: An Analysis of the World Health Organization Registry Publisher



Macklin G1 ; Liao Y1, 2 ; Takane M1 ; Dooling K1 ; Gilmour S2 ; Mach O1 ; Kew OM3, 4 ; Sutter RW1 ; Diop O5 ; Moeletsi NG6 ; Williams R7 ; Seghier M8 ; Delpeyroux F9 ; Benito GR10 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Macklin G1
  2. Liao Y1, 2
  3. Takane M1
  4. Dooling K1
  5. Gilmour S2
  6. Mach O1
  7. Kew OM3, 4
  8. Sutter RW1
  9. Diop O5
  10. Moeletsi NG6
  11. Williams R7
  12. Seghier M8
  13. Delpeyroux F9
  14. Benito GR10
  15. Freire MC11
  16. Burns C12
  17. Asghar H13
  18. Sharif S14
  19. Deshpande J15
  20. Shahmahmoodi S16
  21. Triki H17
  22. Bassioni LE18
  23. Aljardani A19
  24. Gavrilin E20
  25. Weil M21
  26. Martin J22
  27. Pattamadilok S23
  28. Gunasena S24
  29. Zhang Y25
  30. Xu W26
Show Affiliations
Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
  2. 2. University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
  3. 3. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, United States
  4. 4. Taskforce for Child Health, Atlanta, GA, United States
  5. 5. WHO, Switzerland
  6. 6. WHO Regional Office for Africa, Congo
  7. 7. National Institute for Communicable Diseases, South Africa
  8. 8. Institut Pasteur d'Algerie, Algeria
  9. 9. Institut Pasteur, France
  10. 10. WHO Regional Office for America, United States
  11. 11. Instituto Nacional de Endemedades Infecciosos, Argentina
  12. 12. Centers for Disease Control, United States
  13. 13. WHO Organization Regional Office for Eastern-Mediterranean, Egypt
  14. 14. National Institute of Health, Pakistan
  15. 15. Enterovirus Research Center, India
  16. 16. Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Iran
  17. 17. Institut Pasteur de Tunis, Tunisia
  18. 18. Egyptian Organization for Biological and Vaccine Production (VACSERA), Egypt
  19. 19. Central Public Health Laboratory, Oman
  20. 20. WHO Regional Office for Europe, Denmark
  21. 21. Central Virology Laboratory, Israel
  22. 22. National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, United Kingdom
  23. 23. WHO Regional Office, India
  24. 24. Medical Research Institute, Sri Lanka
  25. 25. WHO Regional Office for Western Pacific, Philippines
  26. 26. Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, China

Source: Frontiers in Immunology Published:2017


Abstract

Individuals with primary immunodeficiency disorder may excrete poliovirus for extended periods and will constitute the only remaining reservoir of virus after eradication and withdrawal of oral poliovirus vaccine. Here, we analyzed the epidemiology of prolonged and chronic immunodeficiency-related vaccine-derived poliovirus cases in a registry maintained by the World Health Organization, to identify risk factors and determine the length of excretion. Between 1962 and 2016, there were 101 cases, with 94/101 (93%) prolonged excretors and 7/101 (7%) chronic excretors. We documented an increase in incidence in recent decades, with a shift toward middle-income countries, and a predominance of poliovirus type 2 in 73/101 (72%) cases. The median length of excretion was 1.3 years (95% confidence interval: 1.0, 1.4) and 90% of individuals stopped excreting after 3.7 years. Common variable immunodeficiency syndrome and residence in high-income countries were risk factors for long-term excretion. The changing epidemiology of cases, manifested by the greater incidence in recent decades and a shift to from high- to middle-income countries, highlights the expanding risk of poliovirus transmission after oral poliovirus vaccine cessation. To better quantify and reduce this risk, more sensitive surveillance and effective antiviral therapies are needed. © 2017 Macklin, Liao, Takane, Dooling, Gilmour, Mach, Kew, Sutter and The iVDPV Working Group.