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1 September 2006

Volume 194, Number 5
The Journal of Infectious Diseases 2006;194:545–551
0022-1899/2006/19405-0003$15.00
DOI: 10.1086/506359
MAJOR ARTICLE

An Outbreak of Poliomyelitis Caused by Type 1 Vaccine‐Derived Poliovirus in China

Xiaofeng Liang,1

Yong Zhang,2

Wenbo Xu,2

Ning Wen,1

Shuyan Zuo,1

Lisa A. Lee,4,5 and

Jingjin Yu3

1National Immunization Programme and 2National Polio Laboratory, Institute of Virology, China Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 3Department of Disease Control, Ministry of Health, and 4World Health Organization, Beijing, China; 5National Immunization Program, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia

Background.In May–July 2004, type 1 vaccine‐derived poliovirus (VDPV) was isolated from 2 case patients with polio and a contact of a third case patient in Guizhou Province.

Methods.We conducted a field investigation of the outbreak, characterized outbreak isolates, and retrospectively reviewed national polio surveillance data for other VDPVs.

Results.Case patients were unimmunized children, 0.9–3.2 years old, living in 2 villages 40 km apart. Immunization coverage in the affected villages was very low. Isolates differed from the Sabin 1 type by 9–11 VP1 nucleotides (1.0%–1.2%); which indicated, on the basis of known rates of mutation of Sabin strains, that they had been circulating for <1 year. A province‐wide immunization response targeting all children <5 years old was initiated in August, and the strain has not been isolated since. During 1997–2004, 10 VDPV strains (5 of type 2, 3 of type 1, and 2 of type 3) were isolated from >50,000 children with acute flaccid paralysis and their contacts; 8 (80%) were found in southern provinces, and 9 (90%) spontaneously disappeared.

Conclusion.This is the first polio outbreak in China in over a decade and the first due to VDPV. The short duration of circulation demonstrates the rapidity with which attenuated Sabin strains can revert to a wild phenotype. One to two VDPVs have been identified each year, primarily in densely populated subtropical regions of southern China. This outbreak highlights the need to consider risks of paralysis from vaccine‐derived strains in development of national poliomyelitis immunization policy.

Received 21 October 2005; accepted 23 February 2006; electronically published 26 July 2006.

  • (See the editorial commentary by Dowdle and Kew, on pages 539–41.)

Reprints or correspondence: Dr. Yu Jingjin, Deputy Director General, Dept. of Disease Control, Ministry of Health, 1 Xizhimenwai South Rd., Beijing, People’s Republic of China 100044 ().

Cited by

Mala Rakoto-Andrianarivelo, Nicksy Gumede, Sophie Jegouic, Jean Balanant, Seta N. Andriamamonjy, Sendraharimanana Rabemanantsoa, Maureen Birmingham, Bakolalao Randriamanalina, Léon Nkolomoni, Marietjie Venter, Barry D. Schoub, Francis Delpeyroux, and Jean-Marc Reynes. (2008) Reemergence of Recombinant Vaccine-Derived Poliovirus Outbreak in Madagascar. The Journal of Infectious Diseases 197:10, 1427-1435
Online publication date: 15-May-2008.
Concepción F. Estívariz, Margaret A. Watkins, Darmawali Handoko, Rusipah Rusipah, Jagadish Deshpande, Bardan J. Rana, Eveline Irawan, Dyah Widhiastuti, Mark A. Pallansch, Arun Thapa, and Sholah Imari. (2008) A Large Vaccine-Derived Poliovirus Outbreak on Madura Island—Indonesia, 2005. The Journal of Infectious Diseases 197:3, 347-354
Online publication date: 1-Feb-2008.
Walter Dowdle and Olen Kew. (2006) Vaccine-Derived Polioviruses: Is It Time to Stop Using the Word “Rare”?. The Journal of Infectious Diseases 194:5, 539-541
Online publication date: 1-Sep-2006.
  • Presented in part: Chinese Journal of Vaccines and Immunizations, 2005;11:245–247 and 252–259.

    Potential conflicts of interest: none reported.

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