| Literature DB >> 28952612 |
Asghar Aghamohammadi1, Hassan Abolhassani1, Necil Kutukculer2, Steve G Wassilak3, Mark A Pallansch4, Samantha Kluglein5, Jessica Quinn6, Roland W Sutter7, Xiaochuan Wang8, Ozden Sanal9, Tatiana Latysheva10, Aydan Ikinciogullari11, Ewa Bernatowska12, Irina A Tuzankina13, Beatriz T Costa-Carvalho14, Jose Luis Franco15, Raz Somech16, Elif Karakoc-Aydiner17, Surjit Singh18, Liliana Bezrodnik19, Francisco J Espinosa-Rosales20, Anna Shcherbina21, Yu-Lung Lau22,23, Shigeaki Nonoyama24, Fred Modell6, Vicki Modell6, Mohamed-Ridha Barbouche25, Mark A McKinlay5.
Abstract
Immunodeficiency-associated vaccine-derived polioviruses (iVDPVs) have been isolated from primary immunodeficiency (PID) patients exposed to oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV). Patients may excrete poliovirus strains for months or years; the excreted viruses are frequently highly divergent from the parental OPV and have been shown to be as neurovirulent as wild virus. Thus, these patients represent a potential reservoir for transmission of neurovirulent polioviruses in the post-eradication era. In support of WHO recommendations to better estimate the prevalence of poliovirus excreters among PIDs and characterize genetic evolution of these strains, 635 patients including 570 with primary antibody deficiencies and 65 combined immunodeficiencies were studied from 13 OPV-using countries. Two stool samples were collected over 4 days, tested for enterovirus, and the poliovirus positive samples were sequenced. Thirteen patients (2%) excreted polioviruses, most for less than 2 months following identification of infection. Five (0.8%) were classified as iVDPVs (only in combined immunodeficiencies and mostly poliovirus serotype 2). Non-polio enteroviruses were detected in 30 patients (4.7%). Patients with combined immunodeficiencies had increased risk of delayed poliovirus clearance compared to primary antibody deficiencies. Usually, iVDPV was detected in subjects with combined immunodeficiencies in a short period of time after OPV exposure, most for less than 6 months. Surveillance for poliovirus excretion among PID patients should be reinforced until polio eradication is certified and the use of OPV is stopped. Survival rates among PID patients are improving in lower and middle income countries, and iVDPV excreters are identified more frequently. Antivirals or enhanced immunotherapies presently in development represent the only potential means to manage the treatment of prolonged excreters and the risk they present to the polio endgame.Entities:
Keywords: combined immunodeficiency; humoral immunodeficiency; immunodeficiency-associated vaccine-derived polioviruses; oral poliovirus vaccine; poliovirus eradication; primary immunodeficiency
Year: 2017 PMID: 28952612 PMCID: PMC5468416 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00685
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
19 Jeffrey Modell Foundation sites from 13 countries enrolled PID patients.
| Country | City | Site no. | Enrolled patients | Culture results | National polio vaccination | PID screening |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | Chandigarh | Site 30 | 23 | 23 | 5 OPV doses (birth-6w-10w-14w-16m) | No |
| Tunisia | Tunis | Site 12 | 40 | 40 | 1 IPV dose (6m) | No |
| 7 OPV doses (2m-3m-6m-18m-6y-12y-18y) | ||||||
| China | Shanghai | Site 23 | 52 | 51 | 4 OPV doses (2m-3m-4m-4y) | No |
| Hong Kong | Site 21 | 11 | 11 | 6 OPV doses before 2007 (birth-3m-5m-18m-6y-11y) | No | |
| Colombia | Medellin | Site 24 | 25 | 25 | 5 OPV doses (2m-4m-6m-18m-5y) | No |
| Iran | Tehran | Site 14 | 102 | 102 | 6 OPV doses (birth-2m-4m-6m-18m-6y) | No |
| Mexico | Mexico City | Site 25 | 20 | 20 | 2 OPV doses (>6m-<5y) | No |
| Poland | Warsaw | Site 17 | 29 | 29 | 3 IPV doses (3m-5m-16m) | No |
| 1 OPV dose (6y) | ||||||
| Russia | Moscow | Site 18 | 35 | 35 | 2 IPV doses (3m-4.5m) | No |
| 4 OPV doses (6m-18m-20m-14y) | ||||||
| Moscow | Site 28 | 20 | 20 | |||
| Yekaterinburg | Site 19 | 28 | 28 | |||
| Turkey | Ankara | Site 27 | 30 | 29 | 2 IPV doses (2m-4m) | No |
| 2 OPV doses (6m-18m) | ||||||
| Ankara | Site 26 | 43 | 43 | |||
| Izmir | Site 11 | 75 | 75 | |||
| Istanbul | Site 20 | 24 | 24 | |||
| Israel | Tel Hashomer | Site 29 | 24 | 24 | 2 OPV doses (6m-18m) | No |
| Japan | Tokyo | Site 13 | 9 | 8 | 2 OPV doses before 2012 (3m-18m) | No |
OPV, oral poliovirus vaccine; IPV, inactivated polio vaccine; PID, primary immunodeficiency; w, weeks; m, months; y, years.
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Demographic data summary for all 635 PID patients.
| Parameters | All patients | CVID | Agammaglobulinemia | SCID | MHC class II deficiency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 635 | 320 | 250 | 54 | 11 |
| Gender (M/F) | 444/191 | 179/141 | 237/13 | 24/30 | 4/7 |
| Current age, mean; years (SD) | 12.7 (8.2) | 21.1 (15.7) | 18.0 (8.5) | 3.8 (4.9) | 7.9 (7.8) |
| Age at first OPV dose, mean; years (SD) | 0.6 (0.8) | 0.5 (1.6) | 0.4 (1.2) | 1.0 (2.6) | 0.6 (0.9) |
| Age at last dose, mean; years (SD) | 2.3 (2.0) | 4.3 (4.9) | 3.0 (3.6) | 2.2 (3.4) | NA |
| Exposure to OPV (Y/N) | 584/51 | 303/17 | 233/17 | 37/17 | 11/0 |
| Paralytic disease | 14 | 4 | 10 | 0 | 0 |
OPV, oral poliovirus vaccine; CVID, common variable immune deficiency; SCID, severe combined immunodeficiency; PID, primary immunodeficiency; MHC, major histocompatibility complex.
Data summary for all 13 PID patients with isolated poliovirus.
| Patient ID | Gender | Age at study entry | Diagnosis | Site | Most recent known OPV exposure | Virus | Excretion duration—no. of nucleotide changes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12-017 | F | 7 years | CVID | Tunisia | 6 years | Sabin 1 | 1 month—3 nucleotide changes |
| 12-007 | M | 11 years | MHC II deficiency | Tunisia | 1 month | Sabin 2 | 5 months excretion—9 nucleotide changes (0.9%) |
| 12-025 | F | 7 years | MHC II deficiency | Tunisia | Unknown | Sabin 3 | 1 month—3 mutations |
| 14-057 | M | 6 years | Agammaglobulinemia | Iran | 1 week | Sabin 2 | 1 month—no mutations |
| 14-108 | F | 10 months | MHC II deficiency | Iran | 6 months | Sabin 2 | 10 months excretion on study—12 nucleotide changes (1.2%) |
| 14-116 | M | 3 months | SCID | Iran | 2 months | Sabin 2 | 6 nucleotide changes (0.6%) |
| 14-117 | F | 1 year | SCID | Iran | 6 months | Sabin 2 | 10 nucleotide changes (1%) |
| 26-012 | M | 22 years | CVID | Ankara, Turkey | 7 years | Sabin 2 | <3 months—no nucleotide changes |
| 27-030 | F | 2.5 years | MHC II deficiency | Ankara, Turkey | 2 years | Sabin 3 | Sequence pending |
| 20-003 | M | 8 months | Agammaglobulinemia | Istanbul, Turkey | 6 months | Sabin 2 | 5 months excretion on study—3–4 nucleotide changes |
| 11-031 | F | 11 months | SCID | Izmir, Turkey | 6 months | Sabin 3 | 15 nucleotide changes |
| 19-021 | M | 13 years | CVID | Yekaterinburg, Russia | 5 years | Sabin 3 | No nucleotide changes |
| 19-023 | F | 6.5 years | Agammaglobulinemia | Yekaterinburg, Russia | Not known | Sabin 2 | No nucleotide changes |
OPV, oral poliovirus vaccine; CVID, common variable immune deficiency; SCID, severe combined immunodeficiency; M, male; F, female; PID, primary immunodeficiency; MHC, major histocompatibility complex.
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Figure 1Prevalence of enterovirus excreters among different groups of primary immunodeficiency patients. C, common variable immunodeficiency; M, major histocompatibility complex II deficiency; A, agammaglobulinemia; S, severe combined immunodeficiencies.
Data summary for all 30 PID patients with isolated non-polio enteroviruses (NPEVs).
| Patient ID | Gender | Age at study entry (year) | Diagnosis | Site | Class of NPEV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12-031 | M | 5 | MHC II deficiency | Tunisia | NA |
| 12-037 | M | 0.4 | MHC II deficiency | Tunisia | NA |
| 12-006 | M | 5 | CVID | Tunisia | Negative/E2 |
| 15-014 | M | 10 | XLA | Argentina | E25 |
| 23-003 | M | 7 | Agammaglobulinemia | China | NA |
| 23-004 | M | 14 | Agammaglobulinemia | China | NA |
| 24-020 | M | 22 | CVID | Columbia | NA |
| 24-023 | M | 4 | Agammaglobulinemia | Columbia | NA |
| 14-079 | F | 28 | CVID | Iran | EV11 |
| 14-020 | M | 7 | Agammaglobulinemia | Iran | EV20 |
| 14-019 | M | 41 | CVID | Iran | EV6 |
| 14-121 | M | 17 | CVID | Iran | NA |
| 25-020 | M | 8 | CVID | Mexico | NA |
| 25-019 | M | 8 | Agammaglobulinemia | Mexico | NA |
| 27-021 | F | 2 | MHC II deficiency | Ankara, Turkey | CA5/no second sample |
| 20-025 | M | 1 | Agammaglobulinemia | Istanbul, Turkey | EV9 |
| 20-007 | F | 18 | CVID | Istanbul, Turkey | CA4 |
| 20-006 | M | 20 | CVID | Istanbul, Turkey | EV 33 |
| 11-018 | M | 5 | SCID | Izmir, Turkey | CA10 |
| 11-050 | F | 6 | CVID | Izmir, Turkey | CA2 |
| 11-048 | M | 0.5 | CVID | Izmir, Turkey | CB |
| 11-042 | M | 11 | CVID | Izmir, Turkey | CB4 |
| 11-016 | M | 17 | CVID | Izmir, Turkey | E6 |
| 11-075 | F | 0.7 | CVID | Izmir, Turkey | NA |
| 11-068 | M | 7 | CVID | Izmir, Turkey | E7 |
| 29-012 | F | 3 | Agammaglobulinemia | Israel | CB5 |
| 29-006 | F | 12 | SCID | Israel | EV01 |
| 29-016 | M | 5 | CVID | Israel | EV11 |
| 29-024 | M | 20 | Agammaglobulinemia | Israel | EV13 |
| 29-008 | M | 9 | Agammaglobulinemia | Israel | NA |
OPV, Oral poliovirus vaccine; CVID, common variable immune deficiency; SCID, severe combined immunodeficiency; M, male; F, female; CA, coxsackie A virus; CB, coxsackie B virus; EV, enterovirus; E, echovirus; PID, primary immunodeficiency; MHC; major histocompatibility complex.
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