Emerging Infectious Diseases (Oct 2017)

Poliovirus Excretion in Children with Primary Immunodeficiency Disorders, India

  • Madhu Chhanda Mohanty,
  • Manisha Rajan Madkaikar,
  • Mukesh Desai,
  • Prasad Taur,
  • Uma Prajwal Nalavade,
  • Deepa Kailash Sharma,
  • Maya Gupta,
  • Aparna Dalvi,
  • Snehal Shabrish,
  • Manasi Kulkarni,
  • Jahnavi Aluri,
  • Jagadish Mohanrao Deshpande

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2310.170724
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 10
pp. 1664 – 1670

Abstract

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Prolonged excretion of poliovirus can occur in immunodeficient patients who receive oral polio vaccine, which may lead to propagation of highly divergent vaccine-derived polioviruses (VDPVs), posing a concern for global polio eradication. This study aimed to estimate the proportion of primary immunodeficient children with enterovirus infection and to identify the long-term polio/nonpolio enterovirus excreters in a tertiary care unit in Mumbai, India. During September 2014–April 2017, 151 patients received diagnoses of primary immunodeficiency (PID). We isolated 8 enteroviruses (3 polioviruses and 5 nonpolio enteroviruses) in cell culture of 105 fecal samples collected from 42 patients. Only 1 patient with severe combined immunodeficiency was identified as a long-term VDPV3 excreter (for 2 years after identification of infection). Our results show that the risk of enterovirus excretion among children in India with PID is low; however, systematic screening is necessary to identify long-term poliovirus excreters until the use of oral polio vaccine is stopped.

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