Abstract

The eradication of wild and vaccine-derived poliovirus requires the global withdrawal of oral poliovirus vaccines (OPVs) and replacement with inactivated poliovirus vaccines (IPVs). The first phase of this effort was the withdrawal of the serotype 2 vaccine in April 2016, with a switch from trivalent OPVs to bivalent OPVs. The aim of our study was to produce comparative estimates of humoral and intestinal mucosal immunity associated with different routine immunisation schedules. We did a random-effect meta-analysis with single proportions and a network meta-analysis in a Bayesian framework to synthesise direct and indirect data. We searched MEDLINE and the Cochrane Library Central Register of Controlled Trials for randomised controlled trials published from Jan 1, 1980, to Nov 1, 2018, comparing poliovirus immunisation schedules in a primary series. Only trials done outside western Europe or North America and without variation in age schedules (ie, age at administration of the vaccine) between study groups were included in the analyses, because trials in high-income settings differ in vaccine immunogenicity and schedules from other settings and to ensure consistency within the network of trials. Data were extracted directly from the published reports. We assessed seroconversion against poliovirus serotypes 1, 2, and 3, and intestinal immunity against serotype 2, measured by absence of shedding poliovirus after a challenge OPV dose. We identified 437 unique studies; of them, 17 studies with a maximum of 8279 evaluable infants were eligible for assessment of humoral immunity, and eight studies with 4254 infants were eligible for intestinal immunity. For serotype 2, there was low between-trial heterogeneity in the data (τ=0·05, 95% credible interval [CrI] 0·009-0·15) and the risk ratio (RR) of seroconversion after three doses of bivalent OPVs was 0·14 (95% CrI 0·11-0·17) compared with three doses of trivalent OPVs. The addition of one or two full doses of an IPV after a bivalent OPV schedule increased the RR to 0·85 (0·75-1·0) and 1·1 (0·98-1·4). However, the addition of an IPV to bivalent OPV schedules did not significantly increase intestinal immunity (0·33, 0·18-0·61), compared with trivalent OPVs alone. For serotypes 1 and 3, there was susbstantial inconsistency and between-trial heterogeneity between direct and indirect effects, so we only present pooled estmates on seroconversion, which were at least 80% for serotype 1 and at least 88% for serotype 3 for all vaccine schedules. For WHO's polio eradication programme, the addition of one IPV dose for all birth cohorts should be prioritised to protect against paralysis caused by type 2 poliovirus; however, this inclusion will not prevent transmission or circulation in areas with faecal-oral transmission. UK Medical Research Council.

Highlights

  • In 1988, the World Health Assembly passed a resolu­ tion that committed WHO to eradicating poliomyelitis globally

  • More than 150 countries have relied on oral poliovirus vaccines (OPVs) to eliminate poliovirus transmission and maintain a polio-free status; the cessation of all OPV use and replacement by inactivated poliovirus vaccines (IPVs) is necessary because of the risk of vaccine-derived poliovirus and vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis associated with the OPV.[3]

  • There are In this Article, we aim to estimate the relative several approaches to developing affordable IPV options, immunogenicity of the different OPV and IPV routine including restricting the number of IPV doses in routine immunisation sched­ules considered by WHO and immunisation to two, reducing the volume of each dose member states in inducing humoral and intestinal through intradermal administra­tion, reducing the immunity against poliovirus

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Summary

Introduction

In 1988, the World Health Assembly passed a resolu­ tion that committed WHO to eradicating poliomyelitis globally. Evidence before this study The phased removal of the oral polio vaccine (OPV) is occurring alongside introduction of the inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV), eradication of wild poliomyelitis cases, and prevention of the emergence and circulation of vaccine-derived polioviruses. We searched MEDLINE and the Cochrane Library Central Register of Controlled Trials for randomised controlled trials published from Jan 1, 1980, to Nov 1, 2018, that compare poliovirus immunisation schedules in primary series to compile in a network meta-analysis. The effect of various vaccine schedules on humoral and mucosal immunity has been addressed by many reviews and phase 3 clinical trials in different settings globally, creating a vast pool of recommendations for appropriate vaccine schedules

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