Polio vaccine bites back
Weakened polio borrows genes to gain
strength for outbreak
15 March 2002
TOM CLARKE
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| Global health organizations
face problems completing their eradication of polio. |
| © SPL |
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Genetic sleuthing has revealed how a dose of oral polio
vaccine (OPV) can revert to the deadly poliovirus and cause an
outbreak. The research highlights problems that global health
organizations face completing their eradication of polio, and
the urgency of that effort1.
"It reminds us that we need to be very careful in our
development of a post-eradication policy," says Bruce Aylward,
leader of the World Health Organization's polio eradication
program.
Since the 1960s the use of OPV, a weakened form of the deadly
poliovirus, has nearly eradicated the paralytic disease
poliomyelitis worldwide. In 2000 there were just 2000 cases.
That OPV can revert to a more virulent form has been known
since its creation. But it has only recently become a problem -
widespread eradication means that susceptibility to poliovirus
is on the rise.
The new research is yet another illustration of how the
vaccine has fallen victim to its own success.
No wall of immunity
The Americas were declared free of wild poliovirus in 1999.
Around this time a polio outbreak began on Hispaniola, a
Caribbean island shared by the Dominican Republic and Haiti. The
disease killed two children and paralysed a further 19.
From the genetic sequence of virus samples from each of these
children, virologist Olen Kew at the US Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, and his team have
now deduced the origin of the deadly virus. "It came from a
single dose of OPV given to a single [probably Haitian] child,"
says Kew.
Genes crucial to polio's virulence are switched off in OPV.
They had switched back on in the Hispaniola virus, the
researchers found, probably through random mutation. This is
hardly surprising because poliovirus "is one of the most rapidly
evolving viruses we know", says Kew.
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Reversion was not blocked by a wall of
immunity
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| Olen Kew, US Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention |
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The researchers found other genes that didn't belong to polio
at all. The offending virus had borrowed genetic information
from related gut pathogens called enteroviruses in the children
it infected. This cut'n'paste trick may have enabled it to
regain strength more quickly than it could by random mutation.
"It is a great shortcut," says Mark Pallanch, a member of the
CDC team.
Fortunately this kind of reversion can only happen in certain
situations, says Pallanch. The situation in Hispaniola, it turns
out, was perfect.
As many as 20% of children in some parts of Hispaniola had
not been fully vaccinated with OPV. And wild poliovirus, which
also causes immunity, had been absent from the island for many
years. So there were sufficient children on the island who were
susceptible enough to polio to carry and spread the virusÂ
In Hispaniola "the process of reversion was not blocked by a
wall of immunity", says Kew. OPV passed from child to child,
replicating as it went. It reverted to a virulent form in about
a year, the researchers estimate.
Time running out
Good vaccine coverage in most areas means that such outbreaks
are rare. But two others recently in Egypt2
and the Philippines3 have raised
concerns that the clock is ticking on efforts to eradicate polio
globally4.
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We've now heightened our surveillance
worldwide
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| Bruce Aylward, WHO Polio
Eradication Program |
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The big fear is a vaccine-derived outbreak devastating a
completely susceptible child population, in the United States or
Europe, which have been free of polio and OPV for decades, for
instance.
To prevent this, OPV must be given to children in
unvaccinated areas as quickly as possible and in a synchronized
manner. The vaccine must then be withdrawn from use immediately.
"The ongoing use of OPV poses a risk in itself," says Kew.
"It confirms something we already knew," says Aylward, who is
concentrating on plans to phase out OPV. The recent OPV-related
outbreaks have provided an idea of what to watch out for, he
says. "We've now heightened our surveillance worldwide to catch
this," he adds. |