Last data update: Dec 09, 2024. (Total: 48320 publications since 2009)
Records 1-6 (of 6 Records) |
Query Trace: Belgasmi H[original query] |
---|
Molecular epidemiology of enteroviruses from Guatemalan wastewater isolated from human lung fibroblasts
Sayyad L , Harrington C , Castro CJ , Belgasmi-Allen H , Jeffries Miles S , Hill J , Mendoza Prillwitz ML , Gobern L , Gaitán E , Delgado AP , Castillo Signor L , Rondy M , Rey-Benito G , Gerloff N . PLoS One 2024 19 (7) e0305108 The Global Specialized Polio Laboratory at CDC supports the Global Poliovirus Laboratory Network with environmental surveillance (ES) to detect the presence of vaccine strain polioviruses, vaccine-derived polioviruses, and wild polioviruses in high-risk countries. Environmental sampling provides valuable supplementary information, particularly in areas with gaps in surveillance of acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) mainly in children less than 15 years. In collaboration with Guatemala's National Health Laboratory (Laboratorio Nacional de Salud Guatemala), monthly sewage collections allowed screening enterovirus (EV) presence without incurring additional costs for sample collection, transport, or concentration. Murine recombinant fibroblast L-cells (L20B) and human rhabdomyosarcoma (RD) cells are used for the isolation of polioviruses following a standard detection algorithm. Though non-polio-Enteroviruses (NPEV) can be isolated, the algorithm is optimized for the detection of polioviruses. To explore if other EV's are present in sewage not found through standard methods, five additional cell lines were piloted in a small-scale experiment, and next-generation sequencing (NGS) was used for the identification of any EV types. Human lung fibroblast cells (HLF) were selected based on their ability to isolate EV-A genus. Sewage concentrates collected between 2020-2021 were isolated in HLF cells and any cytopathic effect positive isolates used for NGS. A large variety of EVs, including echoviruses 1, 3, 6, 7, 11, 13, 18, 19, 25, 29; coxsackievirus A13, B2, and B5, EV-C99, EVB, and polioviruses (Sabin 1 and 3) were identified through genomic typing in NGS. When the EV genotypes were compared by phylogenetic analysis, it showed many EV's were genomically like viruses previously isolated from ES collected in Haiti. Enterovirus occurrence did not follow a seasonality, but more diverse EV types were found in ES collection sites with lower populations. Using the additional cell line in the existing poliovirus ES algorithm may add value by providing data about EV circulation, without additional sample collection or processing. Next-generation sequencing closed gaps in knowledge providing molecular epidemiological information on multiple EV types and full genome sequences of EVs present in wastewater in Guatemala. |
Response to vaccine-derived polioviruses detected through environmental surveillance, Guatemala, 2019
Rodríguez R , Juárez E , Estívariz CF , Cajas C , Rey-Benito G , Amézquita MOB , Miles SJ , Orantes O , Freire MC , Chévez AE , Signor LC , Sayyad L , Jarquin C , Cain E , Villalobos Rodríguez AP , Mendoza L , Ovando CA , Mayorga HJB , Gaitán E , Paredes A , Belgasmi-Allen H , Gobern L , Rondy M . Emerg Infect Dis 2023 29 (8) 1524-1530 Guatemala implemented wastewater-based poliovirus surveillance in 2018, and three genetically unrelated vaccine-derived polioviruses (VDPVs) were detected in 2019. The Ministry of Health (MoH) response included event investigation through institutional and community retrospective case searches for acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) during 2018-2020 and a bivalent oral polio/measles, mumps, and rubella vaccination campaign in September 2019. This response was reviewed by an international expert team in July 2021. During the campaign, 93% of children 6 months <7 years of age received a polio-containing vaccine dose. No AFP cases were detected in the community search; institutional retrospective searches found 37% of unreported AFP cases in 2018‒2020. No additional VDPV was isolated from wastewater. No evidence of circulating VDPV was found; the 3 isolated VDPVs were classified as ambiguous VDPVs by the international team of experts. These detections highlight risk for poliomyelitis reemergence in countries with low polio vaccine coverage. |
Genome Sequences of 16 Enterovirus Isolates from Environmental Sewage in Guatemala, 2019 to 2021.
Harrington C , Sayyad L , Castro C , Hill J , Jeffries-Miles S , Belgasmi H , Rey-Benito G , Mendoza Prillwitz ML , Castillo Signor L , Gerloff N . Microbiol Resour Announc 2022 11 (9) e0056222 Enteroviruses can cause human infectious disease. We report 16 near-complete genome sequences of enteroviruses that were isolated through environmental surveillance of wastewater in Guatemala. |
CaF: A sensitive, low-cost filtration method for detecting polioviruses and other enteroviruses in residual waters
Belgasmi H , Miles SJ , Sayyad L , Wong K , Harrington C , Gerloff N , Coulliette-Salmond AD , Guntapong R , Tacharoenmuang R , Ayutthaya AIN , Apostol LNG , Valencia MLD , Burns CC , Benito GR , Vega E . Front Environ Sci 2022 10 Acute flaccid paralysis (AFP) surveillance has been used to identify polio cases and target vaccination campaigns since the inception of the Global Poliovirus Eradication Initiative (GPEI) in 1988. To date, only Afghanistan and Pakistan have failed to interrupt wild poliovirus transmission. Circulation of vaccine-derived polioviruses (VDPV) continues to be a problem in high-risk areas of the Eastern Mediterranean, African, and Southeast Asian regions. Environmental surveillance (ES) is an important adjunct to AFP surveillance, helping to identify circulating polioviruses in problematic areas. Stools from AFP cases and contacts (>200,000 specimens/year) and ES samples (>642 sites) are referred to 146 laboratories in the Global Polio Laboratory Network (GPLN) for testing. Although most World Health Organization supported laboratories use the two-phase separation method due to its simplicity and effectiveness, alternative simple, widely available, and cost-effective methods are needed. The CAF (Concentration and Filtration Elution) method was developed from existing filtration methods to handle any type of sewage or residual waters. At $1020 US per sample for consumable materials, CAF is cost effective, and all equipment and reagents are readily available from markets and suppliers globally. The report describes the results from a parallel study of CAF method with the standard two-phase separation method. The study was performed with samples collected from five countries (Guatemala, Hati, Thailand, Papua New Guinea, and the Philippines), run in three laboratories(United States, Thailand and in the Philippines) to account for regional and sample-to-sample variability. Samples from each site were divided into two 500ml aliquots and processed by both methods, with no other additional concentration or manipulation. The results of 338 parallel-tested samples show that the CAF method is more sensitive than the two-phase separation method for detection of non-polio enteroviruses (p-value < 0.0001) and performed as well as the two-phase separation method for polioviruses detection with no significant difference (p-value > 0.05). The CAF method is a robust, sensitive, and cost-effective method for isolating enteroviruses from residual waters. Copyright 2022 Belgasmi, Miles, Sayyad, Wong, Harrington, Gerloff, Coulliette-Salmond, Guntapong, Tacharoenmuang, Ayutthaya, Apostol, Valencia, Burns, Benito and Vega. |
Environmental Surveillance for Risk Assessment in the Context of a Phase 2 Clinical Trial of Type 2 Novel Oral Polio Vaccine in Panama.
Rojas-Bonilla M , Coulliette-Salmond A , Belgasmi H , Wong K , Sayyad L , Vega E , Grimoldi F , Oberste MS , Ruttimann R . Viruses 2021 13 (7) Environmental surveillance was recommended for risk mitigation in a novel oral polio vaccine-2 (nOPV2) clinical trial (M5-ABMG) to monitor excretion, potential circulation, and loss of attenuation of the two nOPV2 candidates. The nOPV2 candidates were developed to address the risk of poliovirus (PV) type 2 circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus (cVDPV) as part of the global eradication strategy. Between November 2018 and January 2020, an environmental surveillance study for the clinical trial was conducted in parallel to the M5-ABMG clinical trial at five locations in Panama. The collection sites were located upstream from local treatment plant inlets, to capture the excreta from trial participants and their community. Laboratory analyses of 49 environmental samples were conducted using the two-phase separation method. Novel OPV2 strains were not detected in sewage samples collected during the study period. However, six samples were positive for Sabin-like type 3 PV, two samples were positive for Sabin-like type 1 PV, and non-polio entero-viruses NPEVs were detected in 27 samples. One of the nOPV2 candidates has been granted Emergency Use Listing by the World Health Organization and initial use started in March 2021. This environmental surveillance study provided valuable risk mitigation information to support the Emergency Use Listing application. Copyright © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. |
Environmental Surveillance for Polioviruses in Hati (2017-2019): The Dynamic Process for the Establishment and Monitoring of Sampling Sites
Alleman MM , Coulliette-Salmond AD , Wilnique P , Belgasmi-Wright H , Sayyad L , Wong K , Gue E , Barrais R , Rey-Benito G , Burns CC , Vega E . Viruses 2021 13 (3) Haïti is at risk for wild poliovirus (WPV) importation and circulation, as well as vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV) emergence. Environmental surveillance (ES) for polioviruses was established in Port au Prince and Gonaïves in 2016. During 2017-2019, initial ES sites were re-evaluated, and ES was expanded into Cap Haïtien and Saint Marc. Wastewater samples and data on weather, hour of collection, and sample temperature and pH were collected every 4 weeks during March 2017-December 2019 (272 sampling events) from 21 sites in Cap Haïtien, Gonaïves, Port au Prince, and Saint Marc. Samples were processed for the detection of polio and non-polio enteroviruses using the two-phase and "Concentration and Filter Elution" methodologies. Polioviruses were serotyped and underwent intra-typic characterization. No WPV or VDPVs were isolated. Sabin-like polioviruses (oral vaccine strain) of serotypes 1 and 3 were sporadically detected. Five of six (83%), one of six (17%), five of six (83%), and two of three (67%) sites evaluated in Cap Haïtien, Gonaïves, Port au Prince, and Saint Marc, respectively, had enterovirus isolation from >50% of sampling events; these results and considerations, such as watershed population size and overlap, influence of sea water, and excessive particulates in samples, were factors in site retention or termination. The evaluation of 21 ES sampling sites in four Haïtian cities led to the termination of 11 sites. Every-four-weekly sampling continues at the remaining 10 sites across the four cities as a core Global Polio Eradication Initiative activity. |
- Page last reviewed:Feb 1, 2024
- Page last updated:Dec 09, 2024
- Content source:
- Powered by CDC PHGKB Infrastructure