2012
DOI: 10.1093/cid/cis714
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An Outbreak of Wild Poliovirus in the Republic of Congo, 2010-2011

Abstract: This outbreak underscores the need to maintain high vaccination coverage to prevent outbreaks, the need to maintain timely high-quality surveillance to rapidly identify and respond to any potential cases before an outbreak escalates, and the need to perform ongoing risk assessments of immunity gaps in polio-free countries.

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Cited by 34 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…2 A and B) following introduction of virus from Angola (3,15), as this lower income country, with a poorer level of sanitation, is likely to have had a different transmission pattern.…”
Section: Significancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…2 A and B) following introduction of virus from Angola (3,15), as this lower income country, with a poorer level of sanitation, is likely to have had a different transmission pattern.…”
Section: Significancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, highly consistent antibody titers against all three PV types and reports of at least partial vaccination coverage in Pointe Noire (5, 8) make prior immunization with tOPV the most likely explanation for the antibody titers observed in fatal cases. This does not exclude inefficient immune protection as the necessary and most likely cause of the outbreak (5,9,28). However, it is intriguing that the ROC outbreak was associated with a much higher CFR than similar outbreaks in regions where WPV circulation had been interrupted and a pronounced incidence in adult patients occurred due to vaccination gaps, such as in Albania in 1996 (29), Namibia in 2000 (5) or Tajikistan in 2010 (6).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sustained vaccination regimens in polio-free regions, together with clinical and environmental poliovirus surveillance will be necessary to combat antigenetically variant polioviruses in the poliomyelitis eradication endgame. than three documented tOPV doses, and 15 (54%) had at least one dose (5). These data seem to be in conflict with current knowledge on the efficacy of OPV, as even low levels of vaccine-derived immunity should confer protection against paralytic disease (14,15).…”
Section: Significancementioning
confidence: 97%
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“…For this generation of physicians, it is worth pointing out that in several recent outbreaks of WPV, a majority of cases have been in adults, in whom paralysis is known to be more widespread and severe and the case-fatality rate higher than in young children. 7,8 This observation is not new and it was noted at the advent of poliovirus vaccination that paralytic poliomyelitis had been increasing in incidence in older children and adults for 25 years. 9 Although the increases in adults during recent outbreaks could be due to gaps in poliovirus immunization, the chronological increase in age of paralytic poliomyelitis remains enigmatic since this was occurring prior to poliovirus vaccination.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%