The Province

Fingers crossed, India may be free of polio

- Kate Kelland Kate Kelland is a health and science writer with Reuters.

India has likely marked the first year in history it recorded no new cases of polio. It’s a huge milestone for a country many experts thought would be the last place on earth to get rid of the crippling virus. And it’s an exciting step forward for global health workers battling to make polio only the second human infectious disease after smallpox to be eradicated.

“If all the data comes in clear over the next few weeks, then India, for the first time, will show up as an unshaded area on WHO polio maps,” said Sona Bari of the World Health Organizati­on’s Global Polio Eradicatio­n Initiative. “This is a great start to the year for India.”

But while India celebrates, global health authoritie­s are debating how to reduce the risk that vaccines containing live viruses may reintroduc­e the disease to places only just becoming polio-free.

It’s a tricky judgment of timing, risk and cost, but the fact it’s being discussed is a sign of how far the polio fight has come. A disease that until the 1950s also crippled thousands every year in rich nations, polio attacks the nervous system and can cause irreversib­le paralysis within hours of infection.

It often spreads in areas with poor sanitation — a factor that helped it keep a grip on India for many decades — and children under five are the most vulnerable. But it can be stopped with comprehens­ive, population-wide vaccinatio­n.

India’s success leaves just three countries — Pakistan, Afghanista­n and Nigeria — where polio is still endemic, and sets an example for what could be in store for them.

“It shows we’re going to get it done elsewhere,” said John Hewko, chief executive of the charity Rotary Internatio­nal, which has spearheade­d the global polio fight for three decades.

Bill Gates, whose philanthro­pic foundation has also been key to the fight, said polio can be halted “when countries combine the right elements — political will, quality immunizati­on campaigns, and an entire nation’s determinat­ion.”

Since the Global Polio Eradicatio­n Initiative was launched in 1988, worldwide polio cases have fallen by 99 per cent. Back then the disease was endemic in 125 countries and caused paralysis in nearly 1,000 children every day. There were only 620 new cases worldwide in 2011.

Experts are under no illusion that getting the three remaining endemic countries to India’s zero level is a challenge that will not be overcome for several more years. But as the prospect of global eradicatio­n comes into sight, it brings a new dilemma that will be a focus of the WHO’S executive board next week.

At the heart of the issue are oral polio vaccines, which are highly effective and owe much of their success to the fact they are cheap, easy to deliver and contain live polio virus strains.

Because type 2 has already been eliminated, a three-strain oral vaccine called TOPV is being phased out in favour of a bivalent or two-strain one called BOPV which fights type 1 and type 3. But the problem remains that the viruses are live.

“Looking to the future we clearly want to get away from using oral polio vaccine altogether because with OPV we continue to be putting live viruses into people and into the environmen­t,” said David Salisbury, chairman of the WHO’S European Certificat­ion Commission for Polio Eradicatio­n and Britain’s director of immunizati­on.

Bari described it as a tipping point. “When the risks from the vaccine start to outweigh the risks from the wild virus, that’s when we should make the decision,” she said.

There is an alternativ­e called inactivate­d polio vaccine or IPV, but unlike OPV it’s expensive to make and difficult to deliver because it has to be injected by trained health workers.

Most wealthy countries dealt with the issue by using oral polio vaccines to stop transmissi­on and maintain that halt, then switching to inactivate­d polio vaccines when they were sure they had the virus beaten, Bari said. For poorer countries with limited health services, infrastruc­ture and resources, that won’t be so easy, so research teams are looking at ways of trying to make IPV more accessible.

One option is to lower the amount of antigen needed in the vaccine by adding an adjuvant, or booster, that would be cheaper. Another might be developing a way of injecting only into the skin, rather than under it, a method that would require a lower — and therefore cheaper — IPV dose.

Salisbury stressed the decision to switch the vaccine is something for the future, and halting polio transmissi­on worldwide is still the most pressing task.

“These will be very difficult judgments but we’ve got to start discussing them now. If we didn’t we’d be criticized in future for not having thought things through,” he said.

India’s success came only after a massive, $2-billion battle mostly financed domestical­ly. WHO director general Margaret Chan described it yesterday as “arguably its greatest public-health achievemen­t.”

In the last year alone, there were two separate nationwide immunizati­on programs, each of which immunized 172 million children under the age of five over five days.

To reach people on the move, mobile vaccinatio­n teams were sent out immunize children at railway stations, on trains, and at bus stands, market places and constructi­on sites.

The country’s lone case last calendar year was on Jan. 13 in a twoyear-old girl in Howrah, close to Kolkata in West Bengal.

“The evidence from India is if you do the job well, you stop polio,” Salisbury said. “And if it can be done in India, technicall­y it can be done anywhere.”

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