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The Two Vaccines That Brought Us To The Brink Of Eradicating PolioExplained

In 1948, microbiologists John F. Enders, Thomas Weller, and Frederick Robbins were trying to find a method to grow different viruses in cell cultures. In a routine experiment involving human muscle and skin cells, they decided to test one more virus along with the ones they were already testing, since a vial containing that virus was in their freezer. To their surprise, the virus proliferated and grew well with their method. Their work eventually solved one of the most important scientific problems of the time.

They had just managed to find a way to grow the poliovirus in non-nerve cells.

A major roadblock

In the mid-20th century, researchers widely believed the poliovirus could only be grown in cultures of nerve cells. This misconception was propagated by their inability to infect rhesus macaques by the oral route, and only by directly injecting the virus into the nervous system. At the time, they didn't know the problem was with the poliovirus strains they were using.

The poliovirus has only one natural host — humans — and many of the early strains of the virus were isolated from humans and wouldn't infect non-human primates. Since scientists kept passing the virus through the brain tissues of macaques, it adapted to that mode of infection.

The inability to culture polio in non-nerve cells was a major roadblock to developing a polio vaccine. But thanks to Enders and his team, the poliovirus could now be mass-produced for vaccine research.

Eradication target missed

Polio eradication is one of the top priorities of the World Health Organisation (WHO). Since Africa was declared polio-free in August 2020, the wild poliovirus has been restricted to rural pockets in Afghanistan and Pakistan. But from here, according to a recent report in Science, the virus is beginning to reappear in big cities in these two countries.

This reemergence is a result of vaccine hesitancy due to misinformation, conflict, poverty, and limited access to these isolated regions. The WHO's Global Polio Eradication Initiative is thus set to miss its deadline of eradicating polio by the end of 2024.

The Initiative's failure in Afghanistan and Pakistan casts a long shadow on an otherwise remarkable achievement: of polio having been eradicated everywhere else. This feat was driven by two vaccines, both invented within a year of each other. They are administered differently, provide distinct levels of protection, contain different components, and target different compartments of the immune system. Yet they both played equally invaluable roles in the global fight against polio.

The systemic and the mucosal

In late 1949, Enders received a letter requesting the starting material and the procedure his team had perfected to grow the poliovirus in culture. At the time, Enders & co. Were discussing their own future work. While his younger colleagues Weller and Robbins wanted to use the method to foray into vaccine research, Enders said such a job was ill-suited for basic science researchers like themselves. They handed over the sample and the procedure to the letter's author of the letter, the director of the Virus Research Laboratory at the University of Pittsburgh, Jonas Salk.

Salk made the first successful vaccine for polio. He grew the virus using the method Enders and his team had developed, inactivated it by treating it with formaldehyde, and injected it into his test subjects. The fragments of the inactivated virus were able to induce immunity in their bodies. Importantly, since the vaccine was introduced into the muscle, it generated systemic immunity.

The immune system has two main parts: the systemic and the mucosal. The systemic component includes the blood, the brain, and all other organ systems. The mucosal component includes the inner linings of the digestive and respiratory systems, the urogenital tract, and the eyes. These regions are lined with mucous membranes that provide an additional layer of protection, as they frequently come into contact with the external environment.

Striking at ground zero

Soon after Salk made his inactivated polio vaccine (IPV), Albert Sabin developed another vaccine that contained live polio strains weakened by growing them serially in macaque cells, making them unfit for human infection. Since Sabin's vaccine contained live virus particles, it had to rely on its natural mode of infection and was therefore administered orally. This was the oral polio vaccine (OPV).

Since the OPV went into the stomach, it induced a powerful protective mucosal immune response right where the virus would have to begin its infection.

The OPV had multiple advantages over the IPV. First, the vaccine induced a protective response at the viral entry site — the gut — allowing it to provide a much greater degree of protection relative to the IPV. Second, the OPV was administered orally and didn't require syringes or trained personnel for its administration.

A one-two punch

But there was a catch. Occasionally, the weakened virus in the OPV would revert, and would do the very job it was designed to prevent: cause polio. On the other hand, the IPV, while being a less potent vaccine, contained inactivated virus particles and carried no risk of causing vaccine-induced polio.

The world has used both vaccines in the fight against polio. While some countries, such as Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Iceland, relied exclusively on the IPV, most countries have used a combination of the two. The latter countries prefer the OPV for its superior protection and ease of administration. When the number of natural polio cases drops to zero, they switch to IPV for its enhanced safety.

Despite the many differences between the Salk and Sabin vaccines, they share one crucial feature that armed the WHO in its fight against polio: both Jonas Salk and Albert Sabin chose not to patent their vaccines. When asked who owned the patent on his vaccine, Salk famously replied: "Well, the people, I would say. There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?"

Arun Panchapakesan is an assistant professor at the Y.R. Gaithonde Centre for AIDS Research and Education, Chennai.


Polio Worker Injured In Karachi Shooting

One suspect arrested with weapons and a motorcycle recovered, while two accomplices managed to escape

A polio worker was injured in a shooting by robbers in Karachi's SITE Superhighway Industrial Area, according to police reports. One suspect was arrested with weapons and a motorcycle recovered, while two accomplices managed to escape.

According to Express News, the incident occurred near a private textile mill within the SITE Superhighway Industrial Area police station limits. Upon hearing the gunfire, local police responded promptly and apprehended one suspect. The other two fled the scene.

The injured individual has been identified as 27-year-old Azam, son of Ayub. He is reportedly a polio worker. Azam was returning from a bank in the Surjani Town police station area when three armed robbers intercepted him, stealing his money at gunpoint.

Also read: World's largest free morgue opens in Karachi with capacity for 1,000 bodies

Azam pursued the robbers to the SITE Superhighway, where an exchange of gunfire ensued, resulting in his injury. He was immediately transported to the hospital for treatment.

The police have arrested suspect Muhammad Rashid, son of Hakeem, while efforts are ongoing to capture the remaining suspects.


Punjab To Set Up Polio Counters At Entrance Points Of Province

On the directions of the Chief Minister Punjab, the provincial government has stepped up its efforts to ensure the complete eradication of polio and has decided to establish polio counters at all 14 entry and exit points of the province.

The decision was taken during a meeting of the Provincial Taskforce on Polio Eradication held at the Civil Secretariat. Provincial ministers Khawaja Salman Rafique, Khawaja Imran Nazir, Chief Secretary Punjab Zahid Akhtar Zaman, Secretary Health Ali Jan, Punjab Polio Prevention Program head Khizar Afzal and officers concerned attended the meeting. The participants agreed to raise the target of routine immunization to 95 percent for prevention of polio and other diseases.

Khawaja Salman Rafique said that during the next anti-polio campaign, all the provincial ministers would be present in the field with the polio teams. He mentioned that a different mechanism for polio eradication would be devised for each district. He said that the deputy commissioners, and CEOs health should inform about the problems hindering the desired goals of polio eradication.

Khawaja Imran Nazir said that if needed, a health emergency would be declared in the province in connection with polio. He said that the mobile population was the main source of spread of the virus, adding that every child entering the boundaries of Punjab would be administered polio vaccine.

The Chief Secretary directed the health department to take action against the staff who showed poor performance in the anti-polio campaigns. He said that eradication of polio was a national agenda, and "there is no room for negligence". He remarked that the child who was left without polio vaccine becomes a 'problem child' for the whole world. He asserted that an unconventional plan has to be adopted to achieve required results from the anti-polio campaign.

Secretary Health Ali Jan gave a detailed briefing at the meeting. He told the participants that the ongoing anti-polio campaign in five districts including Lahore would continue till July 7. He said that polio virus has been confirmed in the environmental samples of Rawalpindi and Gujranwala.

Meanwhile, Provincial Minister for Health and Chairman of the Cabinet Committee on Disaster Management, Khawaja Salman Rafique on Thursday reached Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) Headquarters to review monsoon rains preparations and river conditions.

He toured the PDMA control room where Director General PDMA Irfan Ali Kathia briefed him in detail about the status of monsoon rains and water levels in rivers and working of the department to meet the challenges.

Minister Rafique also reviewed the safety measures in place across the province regarding the monsoon rains.

On the occasion, Khawaja Salman Rafique said that preparations were complete to tackle the torrential rains and potential floods in Punjab and an awareness campaign was being conducted regarding precautionary measures.

"We are making every effort to ensure timely measures for the protection of human lives and all the departments, divisional and district administrations should maintain close coordination, as coordination between PDMA and other institutions will prove extremely effective in disaster prevention," he added.

Director General PDMA Irfan Ali Kathia said that all the resources would be utilized to address the potential flood threats and precautionary arrangements have been completed in vulnerable districts.

"Due to climatic changes, Pakistan may face severe rains and flood conditions", he warned.






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