Abstract
Serotype 2 oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV2) can revert to regain wild-type neurovirulence and spread to cause emergences of vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV2). After its global withdrawal from routine immunization in 2016, outbreak response use has created a cycle of VDPV2 emergences that threaten eradication. We implemented a hierarchical model based on VP1 region genetic divergence, time, and location to attribute emergences to campaigns and identify risk factors. We found that a 10 percentage point increase in population immunity in children younger than 5 years at the campaign time and location corresponds to a 18.0% decrease (95% credible interval [CrI], 6.3%-28%) in per-campaign relative risk, and that campaign size is associated with emergence risk (relative risk scaling with population size to a power of 0.80; 95% CrI,. 50-1.10). Our results imply how Sabin OPV2 can be used alongside the genetically stable but supply-limited novel OPV2 (listed for emergency use in November 2020) to minimize emergence risk.
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Gray, E. J., Cooper, L. V., Bandyopadhyay, A. S., Blake, I. M., & Grassly, N. C. (2023). The Origins and Risk Factors for Serotype-2 Vaccine-Derived Poliovirus Emergences in Africa during 2016-2019. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 228(1), 80–88. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiad004
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