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Role of environmental poliovirus surveillance in global polio eradication and beyond

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 August 2011

T. HOVI*
Affiliation:
National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), Helsinki, Finland
L. M. SHULMAN
Affiliation:
Central Virology Laboratory (CVL), Ministry of Health, Sheba Medical Center, Tel-Hashomer, Israel
H. VAN DER AVOORT
Affiliation:
National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, The Netherlands
J. DESHPANDE
Affiliation:
Enterovirus Research Centre (ERC), Mumbai, India
M. ROIVAINEN
Affiliation:
National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), Helsinki, Finland
E. M. DE GOURVILLE
Affiliation:
Global Poliomyelitis Eradication Initiative, WHO, Geneva, Switzerland
*
*Author for correspondence: Professor T. Hovi, National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), Mannerheimintie 166, PO Box 30, Helsinki 00271, Finland. (Email: tapani.hovi@thl.fi)
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Summary

Environmental poliovirus surveillance (ENV) means monitoring of poliovirus (PV) transmission in human populations by examining environmental specimens supposedly contaminated by human faeces. The rationale is based on the fact that PV-infected individuals, whether presenting with disease symptoms or not, shed large amounts of PV in the faeces for several weeks. As the morbidity:infection ratio of PV infection is very low, this fact contributes to the sensitivity of ENV which under optimal conditions can be better than that of the standard acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) surveillance. The World Health Organization has included ENV in the new Strategic Plan of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative for years 2010–2012 to be increasingly used in PV surveillance, supplementing AFP surveillance. In this paper we review the feasibility of using ENV to monitor wild PV and vaccine-derived PV circulation in human populations, based on global experiences in defined epidemiological situations.

Information

Type
Review Article
Creative Commons
WHO has granted permission to Cambridge University Press to publish the contribution written by WHO. This article may not be reprinted or reused in any way in order to promote any commercial products or services.
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and World Health Organization, 2011. WHO has granted permission to Cambridge University Press to publish the contribution written by WHO. This article may not be reprinted or reused in any way in order to promote any commercial products or services.
Figure 0

Table 1. Original principles and current objectives of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative

Figure 1

Table 2. Selected indicators of the success of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative

Figure 2

Fig. 1. Use of converging sewage systems for monitoring poliovirus circulation. A schematic picture of a sewer network with small branches starting from a single house or group of houses, joining stepwise to larger sewer branches, and finally ending in a sewage treatment plant. The inlet to the plant is the primary sampling site for monitoring the population served by this network. Two specific features are visualized. (1) Small circles with lower-case letters represent different viruses circulating in different locations of excretors throughout the catchment area of main sewer line A. At the main sampling site these viruses, plus those putatively derived from main sewers B and C, may appear as a complex mixture. (2) The dashed circle labelled PV represents a situation where a single or small group of poliovirus (PV) excretor(s) live in a geographically restricted subregion of the catchment area. Decreasing numbers at successive sites of network junctions () along the trunk lines leading towards the processing plant indicate a decreasing likelihood of PV detection as the concentration of virus is diluted by wastewater from converging lines. In case wild type or vaccine-derived poliovirus is detected at the primary sampling site, the same numbers reflect the order and positioning for secondary (and stepwise forward) sampling sites that are necessary in order to reveal the PV excretor(s).

Figure 3

Fig. 2. Factors influencing recovery of poliovirus (PV) from the sewage system. Circles with a cross represent steps where uncontrollable factors (steps 1 and 2) or controllable factors (steps 3 and 4) may affect the end results. PV aggregates are dispersed and fluctuations of concentrations smoothed by the complexity of the sewage systems that include turbulence from high flow rates and converging streams from multiple trunk lines at branch points and in some cases from pumping stations that lift sewage upwards from low-lying areas to allow continuation of gravitational flow to the processing plant. All PVs excreted by the source population will not be readily detectable at the sampling site as some will be inactivated during transit, faecal matter from disposable baby diapers is disposed elsewhere among solid waste, and the complexity of the sewerage may result in retention of some of the input virus preventing it from ever reaching the sampling site or delaying its passage so that it arrives after the sample is taken.

Figure 4

Table 3. Examples of variation of isolation results from five parallel L20B cell vials (modified from a table originally published in [13])

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Table 4. Wild poliovirus (WPV) transmission in Egypt monitored with acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) surveillance vs. environmental surveillance in 2001–2009

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Table 5. Wild poliovirus (WPV) and vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV) detection in sewage in Mumbai compared to results of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) surveillance

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Table 6. Environmental surveillance in documentation of short-lived oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) circulation after cessation of OPV administration

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Table 7. Global detection of wild and vaccine-derived polioviruses in sewage waters in 1984–2010