Last data update: Mar 17, 2025. (Total: 48910 publications since 2009)
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Progress toward poliomyelitis eradication - worldwide, January 2021-March 2023
Lee SE , Greene SA , Burns CC , Tallis G , Wassilak SGF , Bolu O . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2023 72 (19) 517-522 ![]() Since the World Health Assembly established the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) in 1988, two of the three wild poliovirus (WPV) serotypes (types 2 and 3) have been eradicated, and global WPV cases have decreased by more than 99.9%. Afghanistan and Pakistan remain the only countries where indigenous WPV type 1 (WPV1) transmission has not been interrupted. This report summarizes progress toward global polio eradication during January 1, 2021-March 31, 2023, and updates previous reports (1,2). In 2022, Afghanistan and Pakistan reported 22 WPV1 cases, compared with five in 2021; as of May 5, 2023, a single WPV1 case was reported in Pakistan in 2023. A WPV1 case was reported on the African continent for the first time since 2016, when officials in Malawi confirmed a WPV1 case in a child with paralysis onset in November 2021; neighboring Mozambique subsequently reported eight genetically linked cases. Outbreaks of polio caused by circulating vaccine-derived polioviruses (cVDPVs) can occur when oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) strains circulate for a prolonged time in underimmunized populations, allowing reversion to neurovirulence (3). A total of 859 cVDPV cases occurred during 2022, an increase of 23% from 698 cases in 2021. cVDPVs were detected in areas where poliovirus transmission had long been eliminated (including in Canada, Israel, the United Kingdom, and the United States). In addition, cocirculation of multiple poliovirus types occurred in multiple countries globally (including Democratic Republic of the Congo [DRC], Israel, Malawi, Mozambique, Republic of the Congo, and Yemen). The 2022-2026 GPEI strategic plan targeted the goal of detecting the last cases of WPV1 and cVDPV in 2023 (4). The current global epidemiology of poliovirus transmission makes the likelihood of meeting this target date unlikely. The detections of poliovirus (WPV1 and cVDPVs) in areas where it had been previously eliminated underscore the threat of continued poliovirus spread to any area where there is insufficient vaccination to poliovirus (3). Mass vaccination and surveillance should be further enhanced in areas of transmission to interrupt poliovirus transmission and to end the global threat of paralytic polio in children. |
Quantifying primaquine effectiveness and improving adherence: a round table discussion of the APMEN Vivax Working Group
Thriemer K , Bobogare A , Ley B , Gudo CS , Alam MS , Anstey NM , Ashley E , Baird JK , Gryseels C , Jambert E , Lacerda M , Laihad F , Marfurt J , Pasaribu AP , Poespoprodjo JR , Sutanto I , Taylor WR , van den Boogaard C , Battle KE , Dysoley L , Ghimire P , Hawley B , Hwang J , Khan WA , Mudin RNB , Sumiwi ME , Ahmed R , Aktaruzzaman MM , Awasthi KR , Bardaji A , Bell D , Boaz L , Burdam FH , Chandramohan D , Cheng Q , Chindawongsa K , Culpepper J , Das S , Deray R , Desai M , Domingo G , Duoquan W , Duparc S , Floranita R , Gerth-Guyette E , Howes RE , Hugo C , Jagoe G , Sariwati E , Jhora ST , Jinwei W , Karunajeewa H , Kenangalem E , Lal BK , Landuwulang C , Le Perru E , Lee SE , Makita LS , McCarthy J , Mekuria A , Mishra N , Naket E , Nambanya S , Nausien J , Duc TN , Thi TN , Noviyanti R , Pfeffer D , Qi G , Rahmalia A , Rogerson S , Samad I , Sattabongkot J , Satyagraha A , Shanks D , Sharma SN , Sibley CH , Sungkar A , Syafruddin D , Talukdar A , Tarning J , Kuile FT , Thapa S , Theodora M , Huy TT , Waramin E , Waramori G , Woyessa A , Wongsrichanalai C , Xa NX , Yeom JS , Hermawan L , Devine A , Nowak S , Jaya I , Supargiyono S , Grietens KP , Price RN . Malar J 2018 17 (1) 241 The goal to eliminate malaria from the Asia-Pacific by 2030 will require the safe and widespread delivery of effective radical cure of malaria. In October 2017, the Asia Pacific Malaria Elimination Network Vivax Working Group met to discuss the impediments to primaquine (PQ) radical cure, how these can be overcome and the methodological difficulties in assessing clinical effectiveness of radical cure. The salient discussions of this meeting which involved 110 representatives from 18 partner countries and 21 institutional partner organizations are reported. Context specific strategies to improve adherence are needed to increase understanding and awareness of PQ within affected communities; these must include education and health promotion programs. Lessons learned from other disease programs highlight that a package of approaches has the greatest potential to change patient and prescriber habits, however optimizing the components of this approach and quantifying their effectiveness is challenging. In a trial setting, the reactivity of participants results in patients altering their behaviour and creates inherent bias. Although bias can be reduced by integrating data collection into the routine health care and surveillance systems, this comes at a cost of decreasing the detection of clinical outcomes. Measuring adherence and the factors that relate to it, also requires an in-depth understanding of the context and the underlying sociocultural logic that supports it. Reaching the elimination goal will require innovative approaches to improve radical cure for vivax malaria, as well as the methods to evaluate its effectiveness. |
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- Page last updated:Mar 17, 2025
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