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Gavi green-lights new jab in global fight against polio

The governing board of Gavi, the international organisation that provides vaccines to developing countries, had added a new shot to its roster that could help to eradicate polio worldwide and prevent a resurgence of the paralysing virus.

The new vaccine does not contain the live viruses that are in the polio vaccines currently used in some low- and middle-income countries. Instead, it adds what’s known as an inactivated polio component into a multifaceted shot that is already being used to protect children against five other dangerous infections.

A similar shot is already available in the US and some European countries, reports The New York Times.

Why it matters

Oral polio vaccines, administered in droplet form, have driven down polio cases by more than 99% in recent decades. But because the drops contain live viruses – detectable in the excrement of children who get the vaccine – the virus can spread and cause new infections in countries with poor sanitation. The new vaccine won’t have this problem.

“More children today, in 2023, are paralysed from circulating vaccine-derived polio than wild polio,” said Dr James Campbell, a paediatric infectious disease expert at the University of Maryland School of Medicine who studies vaccine development.

He called the Gavi approval an “important step” in quelling the virus globally because it will give children in low- and middle-income countries access to a product that paediatricians in the United States and Europe have long offered.

The shot is also expected to help prevent infections because of its logistical ease. Since the polio vaccine will be wrapped into a combination product that is already being distributed to children, scientists say countries who use it will be less likely to see a resurgence of polio once the oral vaccines are scaled back.

Polio prevalent in Afghanistan, Pakistan

Polio, officially known as poliomyelitis, is a highly infectious viral disease transmitted mainly through faeces in places with poor sanitation. The virus multiplies in the intestine and invades the nervous system, causing paralysis. Even a single existing case is problematic, experts say, because it could lead to a global resurgence.

The US has long used an inactivated polio vaccine, or IPV, instead of the oral drops, and Gavi has been helping lower income countries buy it for the past 10 years. But the new six-in-one vaccine, called a hexavalent, will also protect children against hepatitis B, Haemophilus influenzae, tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis.

Adding polio protection to the existing five-component vaccine will raise its cost, but public health officials say the move is still economically advantageous. Fewer vaccine doses overall will help to decrease small expenses that add up, including syringes, serum refrigerators and appointments with health workers.

Countries that Gavi serves will now be able to apply for funding for the vaccine, which could become available as soon as 2024. It is administered in three doses within the first months of life – plus a subsequent booster shot before age two – and Unicef has estimated that the global market for the new shot could reach 100m annual doses by 2030.

 

The New York Times article – Shot to Protect Against Polio and Five Other Diseases Is Approved by Gavi (Restricted access)

 

See more from MedicalBrief archives:

 

Scientists re-engineer vaccines to help eradicate polio

 

New oral vaccine linked to African polio cases

 

Polio may never be eradicated, say experts

 

Polio virus discovery shows we can’t let guard down

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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