Sewage Yields Clues to SV40 Transmission
Brian Vastag

Washington
It was a
dirty job and nobody had to do it. But an international team of scientists
did it anyway, testing dozens of sewage samples for simian virus 40 (SV40),
which in the 1950s and 1960s contaminated millions of doses of polio
vaccine. The unsavory task yielded compelling evidence of person-to-person
transmission of SV40, evidence that complicates the contentious search for
links between the monkey virus and human cancers.
During the past decade, an increasingly acrimonious debate over the issue
has split researchers. One camp, mainly pathologists, reports finding the
virus in human brain, bone, and lung tumors. The other, mainly
epidemiologists, counters that cancer trends discount any link.


Colored transmission electron micrograph of polyoma viruses, simian
viruses (SV40) that are a type of papovavirus. Under laboratory
conditions, they can cause the development of tumors in mice. (Photo
credit: CDC / Photo Researchers, Inc.) |
The sewage study is a wild card. In their figuring, epidemiologists
assume that only certain recipients of the vaccines were exposed to SV40.
This assumption allows them to isolate SV40 as a variable and gauge whether
cancer rates increased after 1961, when the last known contaminated vaccines
were given. But what if SV40 circulates in people like it does in monkeys?
"If SV40 is transmitted from person to person
and
I'm not saying that it is
that
would throw the epidemiology off," said Susan Fisher, PhD, chief of the
epidemiology department at the University of Rochester School of Medicine,
during a July presentation to the vaccine safety review committee assembled
by the Institute of Medicine (IOM). "Any cohort called 'unexposed' after
1961 may not truly be unexposed." If no group is truly unexposed, the effect
of SV40 on cancer rates would be difficult to discern.
INCONSISTENT REPORTS

For decades, scientists have known that SV40 causes malignancy in hamster
cells. Beginning in 1992, an increasing number of studies has documented the
presence of the virus inside various human tumors. (Other similar laboratory
studies do not support these findings, sparking a debate over laboratory
methods.) A group of researchers led by Michael Carbone, MD, PhD, a
University of Chicago pathologist, are convinced that combined exposure to
SV40 and asbestos leads to mesothelioma, a rare lung cancer (Semin Oncol.
2002;29:2-17). Most recently, two pathology articles hint at a link to
non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), the incidence of which has increased 82% during
the last 25 years, an increase more dramatic than in any cancer except
melanoma (Lancet. 2002;359:817-823 and 2002;359:851-852).
"It's not such a stretch to see non-Hodgkin lymphoma as being caused by
SV40," Fisher said in her IOM presentation. "There's a long history of
lymphoma and viruses," she said, listing HIV, Epstein-Barr, hepatitis C, and
human herpesvirus 8. All are known to cause various types of lymphoma.
But many epidemiologists are skeptical that SV40 causes any type of
cancer. The incidence trends clearly do not support the link, they say. "In
the end, it is just unclear whether it plays a role in human cancers," said
Howard Strickler, PhD, who has led several SV40 epidemiology projects at the
National Cancer Institute and, more recently, at Albert Einstein College of
Medicine at Yeshiva University. During his presentation to the IOM,
Strickler said that compared with the weighty evidence supporting human
papillomavirus as a cause of cervical cancer, the SV40 hypothesis is weak.
"With HPV, causality has been checked and triple checked by various groups
in various labs and so on," he said.
ENTER THE SEWAGE SAMPLERS

To help break the deadlock, University of Barcelona microbiologist Rosina
Girones, PhD, pursued research based on the hypothesis that if the virus
circulates among people, it would appear in sewage. With funding from the US
Food and Drug Administration (FDA), she collected samples from Washington,
DC, and sites in Spain, Sweden, England, Greece, and South Africa. All
turned up negative for SV40, down to a detection level of five viral
particles/mL. So far so good.
Next, she teamed with researchers in Northern India, where troops of
rhesus macaques, a natural SV40 reservoir, commingle with humans. They team
searched for SV40 in three areas: back country monkey habitats, cities with
roaming monkeys, and Calcutta, which is well outside the monkeys' range.


Rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) (Photo credit: Photo
Researchers, Inc./S. Nagendra) |
As expected, shallow pools of water in the monkey habitats tested
positive for the virus. So did sewage from monkey-colonized cities. (As
India's population burgeoned and cities swelled during the past 50 years,
the monkeys moved in; one census counted 75% of all Indian rhesus macaques
as urban.) The twist came from Calcutta's waste. It too tested positive for
SV40, in high concentrations.
"We're quite sure it's not from monkeys," Girones told a score of
National Institutes of Health scientists who gathered in a small conference
room in mid-July. "The high prevalence of SV40 in raw sewage [from Calcutta]
suggests that SV40 is being transmitted among humans. We're pretty sure it
is." She said that the data also make it clear that the virus can jump from
monkeys to people, further complicating the picture. If the virus has been
circulating in India and perhaps elsewhere, researchers will have an even
thornier time parceling populations into SV40-exposed and SV40-naive groups,
a distinction crucial for their studies.
The finding injects new possibilities into the debate. Perhaps SV40 has
deep roots as an undetected human parasite. A precedent for such a stealthy
infection exists. Epstein-Barr virus and human herpesvirus 6, for example,
only recently came to light as common, long-surviving, and occasionally
harmful. Or perhaps human infection with SV40 did begin with polio vaccines
and started spreading via person-to-person contact. In any case, widespread
SV40 exposure creates a lot of epidemiological noise that will be difficult
to filter out.
That means scientists will need to turn to other tools. Screening for
SV40 antibodies in various groups would help match exposure patterns to
cancer trends, said Keerti Shah, PhD, a Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions
epidemiologist. But current antibody assays yield crude data, as
polyomaviruses similar to SV40 can also trigger positive results. "We
definitely need some better serology," said Girones.
Although she appears to be convinced that SV40 is transmissible, a host
of associated questions remain unanswered. Why did sewage tests from the
United States and Sweden, where tainted vaccines were once common, return
negative results? What vectors transmit the virus from person to person? And
most important, said Girones, "We don't know what kind of infection it
causes, self-limiting and transient, or disease-causing." In monkeys, SV40
infection is chronic and harmless.
If the same is true of humans, and "it turns out SV40 is not harmful, we
will have dodged a bullet," said William Egan, PhD, who directs vaccine
safety research at the FDA. Addressing the IOM panel, which is charged with
the task of sorting out the SV40 conundrum, Egan finished by saying, "And it
won't be because we were smart, it will be because we were lucky."