| Literature DB >> 30056767 |
Radboud J Duintjer Tebbens1, Kimberly M Thompson1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Ending all cases of poliomyelitis requires successful cessation of all oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV), but the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) partners should consider the possibility of an OPV restart. AREAS COVERED: We review the risks of continued live poliovirus transmission after OPV cessation and characterize events that led to OPV restart in a global model that focused on identifying optimal strategies for OPV cessation and the polio endgame. Numerous different types of events that occurred since the globally coordinated cessation of serotype 2-containing OPV in 2016 highlight the possibility of continued outbreaks after homotypic OPV cessation. Modeling suggests a high risk of uncontrolled outbreaks once more than around 5,000 homotypic polio cases occur after cessation of an OPV serotype, at which point restarting OPV would become necessary to protect most populations. Current efforts to sunset the GPEI and transition its responsibilities to national governments poses risks that may limit the ability to implement management strategies needed to minimize the probability of an OPV restart. EXPERT COMMENTARY: OPV restart remains a real possibility, but risk management choices made by the GPEI partners and national governments can reduce the risks of this low-probability but high-consequence event.Entities:
Keywords: Polio; disease outbreaks; dynamic modeling; eradication
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30056767 PMCID: PMC6168953 DOI: 10.1080/14760584.2018.1506333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Expert Rev Vaccines ISSN: 1476-0584 Impact factor: 5.217
Categories of serotype 2 vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV2) events detected since the tOPV-bOPV switch and as of April, 2018, based on our subjective interpretation from limited information [48,49,54,55].
| Category | Most likely source | Number of events detected in | Countries that detected the virus (number of independent events in country if not 1) | Number of AFP casesb | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016a | 2017 | 2018b | ||||
| cVDPV2 | Pre-switch tOPV use | 3c | 3 | 0 | Nigeria (2), Pakistan, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Syria, Somalia, Kenya (0)d | 99 |
| Unauthorized post-switch tOPV use | 0 | 1 | 0 | DRC | 2 | |
| Post-switch authorized mOPV2 use | 0 | 0 | 1 | Nigeria | 0 | |
| iVDPV2 | Pre-switch tOPV use | 6 | 3 | 0 | Nigeria, Argentina, Egypt (3), West Bank and Gaza, Pakistan, Iran, Israel | 5 |
| aVDPV2, tail of ‘normal’ excretion distribution from OPV recipients and close contactse | Pre-switch tOPV use | 8 | 0 | 0 | India (2), Yemen, Pakistan (3), Afghanistan, Somalia | 3 |
| Post-switch authorized mOPV2 use | 0 | 13 | 0 | Nigeria (9), Pakistan (4) | 0 | |
| aVDPV2, unusually long transmission chaine | Pre-switch tOPV use | 2 | 1 | 0 | Mozambique, Pakistan, India | 1 |
| Post-switch authorized mOPV2 use | 0 | 0 | 1f | Nigeria | 0 | |
| aVDPV2 in environment, likely from immunodeficient excretor | Pre-switch tOPV use | 0 | 1 | 0 | Australia | 0 |
| Other aVDPV2g | Pre-switch tOPV use | 1 | 0 | 0 | Russia | 0 |
Abbreviations: AFP, acute flaccid paralysis, aVDPV2, serotype 2 ambiguous vaccine-derived poliovirus; cVDPV2, serotype 2 circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus; DRC, Democratic Republic of the Congo; iVDPV2, serotype 2 immunodeficiency-associated vaccine-derived poliovirus; mOPV2, serotype 2 monovalent OPV; OPV, oral poliovirus vaccine, tOPV, trivalent OPV
a Post-switch only (i.e. April or May 2016, depending on country)
b Through April, 2018 (note that Somalia,, Nigeria, and DRC reported cVDPV2 cases during mid-2018)
c Includes one event representing a renewed detection (environmental sample collected in March, 2016, but cVDPV2 notified days after the switch) of a persistent transmission of a cVDPV2 last detected in 2014 [49]
d Kenya detected the cVDPV2 from Somalia in an environmental sample collected in March, 2018 [54]
e Unusually long chain for transmission differentiated from ‘normal’ excretion distribution using a cut-off of six months since last known homotypic OPV use
f Unauthorized post-switch mOPV2 or tOPV use also possible based on circumstantial information
g Insufficient information available to establish nature of this event
Figure 1.Risks overtime, by serotype and source and defined as the probability of a detected outbreak that triggers an outbreak response (i.e. oSIAs) and based on runs that assumed OPV13 cessation in 2019 [38,40]. (a) All serotypes, triggering events only (including cVDPVs in the event of insufficient OPV intensification). (b) Serotype 1, triggering events and associated outbreaks. (c) Serotype 2, triggering events and associated outbreaks. (d) Serotype 3, triggering events and associated outbreaks.
Figure 2.Distribution of the number of polio cases after homotypic OPV cessation in the global model base case and analysis of stock-outs (to determine whether a stock-out would occur for a given iteration, we assumed an initial and desired filled stockpile level of 100 million doses with 400 million bulk doses and a one-year filling time.). (a) Serotype 1. (b) Serotype 2. (c) Serotype 3.
Figure 3.Conditional probability of uncontrolled outbreaks (i.e. more than 50,000 polio cases, which triggers an OPV restart in the global model [38]) as a function of the number of polio cases, based on the results from Figure 2.
Figure 4.Kinetics of 57 global model iterations that resulted in an OPV restart for different categories of times between homotypic OPV cessation and the initiating event that eventually triggers the OPV restart. (a) Global model base case, with IPV replacing mOPV for oSIAs from 5 years after homotypic OPV cessation (but no other changes in outbreak response strategy). (b) No oSIAs from 5 years after homotypic OPV cessation.
Recommended strategies to minimize the risk of an OPV restart and qualitative impacts and resource needs.
| Risk management strategy | Impacts | Level of internal (national) resources required | Level of external (GPEI or post-GPE international donors) resources required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maintain high OPV coverage prior to OPV cessation | ++++ serotype-specific population immunity to transmission prior to OPV cessation significantly impacts cVDPV risks and probability of OPV restart | + for countries that currently conduct OPV SIAs | ++ for countries that currently conduct OPV SIAs with external support |
| Coordinate OPV cessation globally | +++ critical to minimize post-OPV cessation cVDPV risks | + for countries that currently use OPV | + for coordination and monitoring |
| Perform aggressive outbreak response using mOPV in near-term after OPV cessation | +++ essential to stop transmission of live polioviruses post-OPV cessation to prevent OPV restart | ++ for countries with post-OPV cessation outbreaks | + for countries that currently conduct OPV SIAs with external support |
| Perform aggressive outbreak response using available resources in long-term after OPV cessation | +++ essential to stop transmission of live polioviruses post-OPV cessation to prevent OPV restart | ++ for countries with post-OPV cessation outbreaks | + for countries that currently conduct OPV SIAs with external support |
| Outbreak response poliovirus vaccine global stockpiles | +++ essential to support outbreak response activities | + for OPV | |
| Continue AFP surveillance | +++ essential through OPV-cessation | + for countries that use AFP | ++ for supporting the Global Polio Laboratory Network |
| Continue or add environmental surveillance (ES) | + may help with confidence about no live poliovirus transmission, impact depends on design of the system | ++ for countries that choose to include ES | ++ for coordination and support of countries that require external resources |
| IPV use after cessation of last OPV serotype | +++ essential in countries that continue to produce poliovirus vaccines, store live polioviruses, and/or sustain potential iVDPVs | ++++ for 2-dose schedule | ++++ for countries that require external support |
| Ensure containment | +++ essential to prevent the reintroduction of live polioviruses after OPV-cessation | + for most countries | ++ for global coordination |
| Development of polio antiviral drugs | ? depends on characteristics of products actually developed (e.g. efficacy, cost, ease of delivery, etc.) | ++ to finish development | |
| Prevention of iVDPV outbreaks by screening for PIDs | ? depends on ability to detect iVDPVs and efficacy of polio antiviral drugs | ++ for countries with potential iVDPV excretors | ++ for countries that require external support |
| Develop new OPV and or IPV seed strains | ? depends on characteristics of products actually developed | +++ for development |