| Literature DB >> 31082331 |
Ananda S Bandyopadhyay, Harpal Singh, Jacqueline Fournier-Caruana, John F Modlin, Jay Wenger, Jeffrey Partridge, Roland W Sutter, Michel J Zaffran.
Abstract
The Global Polio Eradication Initiative continues to make progress toward the eradication target. Indigenous wild poliovirus (WPV) type 2 was last detected in 1999, WPV type 3 was last detected in 2012, and over the past 2 years WPV type 1 has been detected only in parts of 2 countries (Afghanistan and Pakistan). Once the eradication of poliomyelitis is achieved, infectious and potentially infectious poliovirus materials retained in laboratories, vaccine production sites, and other storage facilities will continue to pose a risk for poliovirus reintroduction into communities. The recent breach in containment of WPV type 2 in an inactivated poliovirus vaccine manufacturing site in the Netherlands prompted this review, which summarizes information on facility-associated release of polioviruses into communities reported over >8 decades. Successful polio eradication requires the management of poliovirus containment posteradication to prevent the consequences of the reestablishment of poliovirus transmission.Entities:
Keywords: accidental release; biological; containment; laboratory infections; polio; poliomyelitis; poliovirus; reemerging infectious disease; vaccine-preventable diseases; viruses
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31082331 PMCID: PMC6590745 DOI: 10.3201/eid2507.181703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Reported incidents of poliovirus release from laboratories and vaccine production facilities in the pre–polio vaccine era*
| Year | Location (reference) | Source | Poliovirus type | No. cases* | Exposure | Description | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Secondary | Tertiary | ||||||
| 1933 | United States ( | Lab | Not indicated | 1 | Physician | NA | NA | Bitten (cutaneous disruption) by a normal macaque while doing work on poliomyelitis (paralysis); filterable virus capable of reproducing the disease in rabbits was isolated from the case; case was fatal |
| 1935 | United States ( | Vaccine production facility | Not indicated | 12 | Vaccine trial patients, age 5 mo to 20 y | NA | NA | 12 cases of paralytic poliomyelitis in patients receiving trial vaccination against poliomyelitis; natural infections ruled out as cause; 6 deaths |
| 1941 | United States ( | Lab | Not indicated | 1 | Lab staff | NA | NA | Lab staff member experienced paralysis after preparation of infected tissues for inoculation into monkeys; cutaneous inoculation; no polio outbreaks reported in place of residence or areas of travel |
| 1945 | United States ( | Lab | Not indicated | 1 | Lab staff | NA | NA | Lab staff member scratched on hand by noninoculated monkey during transport; subsequent virus contamination of hands might have occurred while feeding or inoculating monkeys; patient experienced paralysis and later died |
| 1946 | Zimbabwe (formerly Rhodesia) ( | Lab | Not indicated | 1 | Lab staff | NA | NA | Infection acquired during inoculation of monkeys with polio virus; paralysis occurred, case was fatal |
| 1949 | United States ( | Lab | WPV2 (mouse- adapted Lansing strain) | 2 | Lab staff | NA | NA | Two lab technicians were infected in the eyes and nose with Lansing (Armstrong) strain while inoculating mice during polio experiments; both experienced paralysis |
| 1950 | Canada ( | Lab | Not indicated | 1 | Physician | Na | NA | Doctor acquired poliomyelitis while performing autopsy on poliomyelitis patient; intracutaneous inoculation; residual weakness; case was not fatal |
| 1954 | United Kingdom ( | Lab | WPV2 (MEF-1) strain | 1 | Lab staff | NA | NA | Lab technicians infected by cutaneous inoculation while performing necropsy on animals infected with wild type-2 (MEF-1) strain; subsequent paralysis; cases were not fatal |
*Cases defined as laboratory positive (with or without paralysis) for poliovirus by standard methods of virus isolation or known exposure to poliovirus. Lab, laboratory; MEF-1, wild poliovirus type 2 laboratory reference strain; NA, not applicable; WPV2, wild poliovirus type 2.
Reported incidents of poliovirus release from laboratories and vaccine production facilities in the post–polio vaccine era*
| Year | Location (reference) | Source | Poliovirus type | No. cases | Exposure | Description | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Secondary | Tertiary | ||||||
| 1955 | United States ( | Vaccine production facility | Not indicated | 164 | Vaccine recipients(≈40,000 children) | 113 contacts of the children | NA | “Cutter incident”; inadequate formaldehyde virus inactivation during poliovirus vaccine production (≈120,000 doses); ≈40,000 children experienced muscle weakness, of whom 51 experienced paralysis; 5 deaths; 113 contacts of the children were also paralyzed, of whom 5 died |
| 1991 | France ( | Lab and
vaccine production facility | WPV3 (Saukett) strain | 1 | No definitive information on exposure of case | Saukett strain isolated in France from a woman from Algeria; source of this lab strain could not be confirmed | ||
| 1992 | Netherlands ( | Vaccine production facility | WPV1 (Mahoney) strain | 1 | Father (worker at facility) | Son | NA | Boy (age 19 mo) with respiratory symptoms (no paralysis); father with history of accidental exposure to Mahoney strains while working in a poliovirus vaccine production facility |
| 1993 | Netherlands ( | Vaccine production facility | WPV3 (Saukett) strain | 1 | No definitive information on exposure of case | Child with gastroenteritis (no paralysis); had travel history to France; no epidemiology established to trace lab exposure; Saukett strains typical for IPV production in France isolated from the stool samples | ||
| 2000 | India ( | Lab and
vaccine production facility | WPV2 (MEF-1) strain | 3 | No definitive information on exposure of case | WPV2 isolates found in Sep 2000 and Nov 2002–Feb 2003 from 10 children with AFP, 1 healthy contact, and 1 environmental sample; isolates unrelated to all previous WPV2 strains found in India; because this was a lab reference strain and not a community-derived wild strain, lab source was suspected | ||
| 2002–2003 | India ( | Lab and
vaccine production facility | WPV2 (MEF-1) strain | 8 | No definitive information on exposure of case | |||
| 2014 | Belgium ( | Vaccine production facility | WPV3 (Saukett) strain | 0 | NA | NA | NA | ≈1013 infectious WPV3 particles accidentally released into sewage system from production plant in Belgium; no poliovirus detected in environmental or human samples |
| 2017 | Netherlands ( | Vaccine production facility | WPV2 (MEF-1) strain | 1 | Worker | None | None | Accidental leakage in vaccine production room; 1 of 2 exposed staff members tested positive by RT-PCR |
*Cases are defined as laboratory positive (with or without paralysis) for poliovirus by standard methods of virus isolation or known exposure to poliovirus. AFP, acute flaccid paralysis; IPV, inactivated poliovirus vaccine; lab, laboratory; MEF-1, wild poliovirus type 2 laboratory reference strain; NA, not applicable; RT-PCR, reverse transcription PCR; WPV, wild poliovirus; WPV1, wild poliovirus type 1; WPV2, wild poliovirus type 2; WPV3, wild poliovirus type 3.
FigureReported incidents of facility-associated poliovirus release from laboratories and manufacturing sites in the pre–polio vaccine era (shown inside dashed-line frames) and the time of poliovirus vaccine introduction to the present (shown inside solid-line frames). AFP, acute flaccid paralysis; IPV, inactivated poliovirus vaccine; MEF-1, wild poliovirus type 2 laboratory reference strain; WPV, wild poliovirus; WPV3, wild poliovirus type 3.