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The Global Polio Eradication Initiative has reported two cases of acute flaccid paralysis caused by wild poliovirus type 1 among children living in Nigeria, a country previously thought to have interrupted transmission of the neurotropic virus in July 2014.
The resurgence of wild poliovirus (WPV) — which was also isolated from close healthy contacts of the children — nullifies the WHO African region’s chances to be declared polio-free by 2017.
Both cases were found among residents of the country’s Borno state, with genetic sequencing indicating a relationship to virus last detected within the state in 2011. According to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), this finding suggests the strain may have been circulating within Borno undetected for the past 5 years.
Matshidiso Moeti
“We are deeply saddened by the news that two Nigerian children have been paralyzed by polio,” Matshidiso Moeti, MBBS, WHO Regional Director for Africa, said in a WHO press release. “The government has made significant strides to stop this paralyzing disease in recent years. The overriding priority now is to rapidly immunize all children around the affected area and ensure that no other children succumb to this terrible disease.”
Details of an outbreak response plan are currently being finalized, but will consist of three large-scale supplementary immunization activities using bivalent oral polio vaccine, according to the surveillance report. The first will begin within the next 2 weeks, the organization wrote, with subsequent rounds conducted every following 2-3 weeks.
Michel Zaffran
“We are confident that with a swift response and strong collaboration with the Nigerian government, we can soon rid the country of polio once and for all,” Michel Zaffran, MEng, director of polio eradication at WHO and GPEI, said in the press release. “This is an important reminder that the world cannot afford to be complacent as we are on the brink of polio eradication — we will only be done when the entire world has been certified polio-free.”
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