Duintjer Tebbens Radboud J, Pallansch Mark A, Thompson Kimberly M
Kid Risk, Inc., 10524 Moss Park Rd., Ste. 204-364, Orlando, FL, 32832, USA.
Division of Viral Diseases, National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
BMC Infect Dis. 2015 Sep 17;15:379. doi: 10.1186/s12879-015-1115-5.
A small number of individuals with B-cell-related primary immunodeficiency diseases (PIDs) may exhibit long-term (prolonged or chronic) excretion of immunodeficiency-associated vaccine-derived polioviruses (iVDPVs) following infection with oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV). These individuals pose a risk of live poliovirus reintroduction into the population after global wild poliovirus eradication and subsequent OPV cessation. Treatment with polio antiviral drugs may potentially stop excretion in some of these individuals and thus may reduce the future population risk.
We developed a discrete event simulation model to characterize the global prevalence of long-term iVDPV excretors based on the best available evidence. We explored the impact of different assumptions about the effectiveness of polio antiviral drugs and the fraction of long-term excretors identified and treated.
Due to the rarity of long-term iVDPV excretion and limited data on the survival of PID patients in developing countries, uncertainty remains about the current and future prevalence of long-term iVDPV excretors. While the model suggests only approximately 30 current excretors globally and a rapid decrease after OPV cessation, most of these excrete asymptomatically and remain undetected. The possibility that one or more PID patients may continue to excrete iVDPVs for several years after OPV cessation represents a risk for reintroduction of live polioviruses after OPV cessation, particularly for middle-income countries. With the effectiveness of a single polio antiviral drug possibly as low as 40% and no system in place to identify and treat asymptomatic excretors, the impact of passive use of a single polio antiviral drug to treat identified excretors appears limited. Higher drug effectiveness and active efforts to identify long-term excretors will dramatically increase the benefits of polio antiviral drugs.
Efforts to develop a second polio antiviral compound to increase polio antiviral effectiveness and/or to maximize the identification and treatment of affected individuals represent important risk management opportunities for the polio endgame. Better data on the survival of PID patients in developing countries and more longitudinal data on their exposure to and recovery from OPV infections would improve our understanding of the risks associated with iVDPV excretors and the benefits of further investments in polio antiviral drugs.
少数患有B细胞相关原发性免疫缺陷疾病(PID)的个体在感染口服脊髓灰质炎疫苗(OPV)后,可能会长期(持续或慢性)排泄与免疫缺陷相关的疫苗衍生脊髓灰质炎病毒(iVDPV)。在全球根除野生脊髓灰质炎病毒并随后停止使用OPV后,这些个体存在将活脊髓灰质炎病毒重新引入人群的风险。使用脊髓灰质炎抗病毒药物进行治疗可能会使其中一些个体停止排泄,从而可能降低未来人群的风险。
我们基于现有最佳证据开发了一个离散事件模拟模型,以描述长期iVDPV排泄者的全球流行情况。我们探讨了关于脊髓灰质炎抗病毒药物有效性以及已识别和接受治疗的长期排泄者比例的不同假设的影响。
由于长期iVDPV排泄情况罕见,且发展中国家PID患者生存数据有限,目前和未来长期iVDPV排泄者的流行情况仍存在不确定性。虽然模型显示全球目前仅有约30名排泄者,且在停止使用OPV后数量迅速下降,但其中大多数无症状排泄,未被发现。一名或多名PID患者在停止使用OPV后可能会继续排泄iVDPV数年,这对停止使用OPV后活脊髓灰质炎病毒的重新引入构成风险,特别是对中等收入国家而言。由于单一脊髓灰质炎抗病毒药物的有效性可能低至40%,且没有识别和治疗无症状排泄者的系统,被动使用单一脊髓灰质炎抗病毒药物治疗已识别的排泄者的影响似乎有限。更高的药物有效性以及积极识别长期排泄者的努力将显著增加脊髓灰质炎抗病毒药物的益处。
开发第二种脊髓灰质炎抗病毒化合物以提高脊髓灰质炎抗病毒有效性和/或最大限度地识别和治疗受影响个体的努力,是脊髓灰质炎终结阶段重要的风险管理机会。关于发展中国家PID患者生存情况的更好数据以及关于他们接触OPV感染和从中恢复的更多纵向数据,将增进我们对与iVDPV排泄者相关风险以及对脊髓灰质炎抗病毒药物进一步投资益处的理解。