Emerging Infectious Diseases (Feb 2021)

Vaccine-Derived Polioviruses, Central African Republic, 2019

  • Marie-Line Joffret,
  • Joël Wilfried Doté,
  • Nicksy Gumede,
  • Marco Vignuzzi,
  • Maël Bessaud,
  • Ionela Gouandjika-Vasilache

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2702.203173
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 2
pp. 620 – 623

Abstract

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Since May 2019, the Central African Republic has experienced a poliomyelitis outbreak caused by type 2 vaccine-derived polioviruses (VDPV-2s). The outbreak affected Bangui, the capital city, and 10 districts across the country. The outbreak resulted from several independent emergence events of VDPV-2s featuring recombinant genomes with complex mosaic genomes. The low number of mutations (<20) in the viral capsid protein 1–encoding region compared with the vaccine strain suggests that VDPV-2 had been circulating for a relatively short time (probably <3 years) before being isolated. Environmental surveillance, which relies on a limited number of sampling sites in the Central African Republic and does not cover the whole country, failed to detect the circulation of VDPV-2s before some had induced poliomyelitis in children.

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