Expert review of vaccines
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Expert review of vaccines · May 2015
ReviewPolio endgame: the global introduction of inactivated polio vaccine.
In 2013, the World Health Assembly endorsed a plan that calls for the ultimate withdrawal of oral polio vaccines (OPV) from all immunization programs globally. The withdrawal would begin in a phased manner with removal of the type 2 component of OPV in 2016 through a global switch from trivalent OPV to bivalent OPV (containing only types 1 and 3). To mitigate risks associated with immunity gaps after OPV type 2 withdrawal, the WHO Strategic Advisory Group of Experts has recommended that all 126 OPV-only using countries introduce at least one dose of inactivated polio vaccine into routine immunization programs by end-2015, before the trivalent OPV-bivalent OPV switch. The introduction of inactivated polio vaccine would reduce risks of reintroduction of type 2 poliovirus by providing some level of seroprotection, facilitating interruption of transmission if outbreaks occur, and accelerating eradication by boosting immunity to types 1 and 3 polioviruses.
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Expert review of vaccines · May 2015
Review Historical ArticleOutbreaks of meningococcal B infection and the 4CMenB vaccine: historical and future perspectives.
Strains of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B (MenB) causing invasive meningococcal disease are genetically diverse; however, only a small number of hyperinvasive lineages (CC32, CC41/44, CC269 and CC162) have dominated during the global spread over the past 50 years. Since the mid-1970s, major outbreaks and hyperendemic disease have been reported in Norway, Cuba, France, Canada, New Zealand (and elsewhere), most recently in the USA. We characterized the epidemiology of these MenB outbreaks and their associated clonal complexes and retrospectively assessed the potential coverage offered by the 4CMenB vaccine, a four-component vaccine developed to help confer protection against a broad range of meningococcal B strains causing disease. Of 21 isolates from four clonal complexes evaluated using both human Serum Bactericidal Assay and the Meningococcal Antigen Testing System, coverage ranged from 67 to 100%. 4CMenB shows good potential as a candidate vaccine to be used in the control of new MenB outbreaks globally.