Frontiers in Immunology (Jul 2019)

Natural Clearance of Prolonged VDPV Infection in a Child With Primary Immunodeficiency Disorder

  • Madhu Chhanda Mohanty,
  • Manisha Ranjan Madkaikar,
  • Mukesh Desai,
  • Jahnavi Aluri,
  • Swapnil Yashwant Varose,
  • Prasad Taur,
  • Deepa Kailash Sharma,
  • Uma Prajwal Nalavade,
  • Sneha Vijay Rane,
  • Maya Gupta,
  • Snehal Shabarish,
  • Aparna Dalvi,
  • Jagadish Mohanrao Deshpande

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.01567
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

The emergence of immunodeficiency-associated vaccine-derived polioviruses (iVDPV) from children with primary immunodeficiency disorders poses a threat to the eradication program. Herein, we report a patient with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID), identified as a prolonged serotype 3 iVDPV (iVDPV3) excreter with 13 VDPV3 isolates and a maximum of 10.33% nucleotide divergence, who abruptly cleared infection after a period of 2 years. Occurrence of an episode of norovirus diarrhea associated with increased activated oligoclonal cytotoxic T cells, inverse CD4:CD8 ratio, significantly elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines, and subsequent clearance of the poliovirus suggests a possible link between inflammatory diarrheal illness and clearance of iVDPV. Our findings suggest that in the absence of B cells and sufficiently activated T/NK cells, macrophages and other T cells may produce auto-inflammatory conditions by TLR/RLR ligands expressed by previous/ongoing bacterial or viral infections to clear VDPV infection. The study highlights the need to screen all the patients with combined immunodeficiency for poliovirus excretion and intermittent follow-up of their immune parameters if found positive, in order to manage the risk of iVDPV excretion in the polio eradication endgame strategy.

Keywords