Polio free does not mean paralysis free
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/polio-free-does-not-mean-paralysis-free/article4266043.ece
There is no room for complacency that India has eliminated this 
crippling disease as Uttar Pradesh and Bihar have recorded a high 
incidence of a condition symptomatic of it 
Identifying children who suddenly display muscle weakness, often not 
moving one or more of their limbs as a result, forms the cornerstone of 
polio surveillance. Such children could have “acute flaccid paralysis” 
(AFP) that is symptomatic of polio , a disease caused by a virus. But AFP
 can also arise for other reasons, including infection by non-polio 
pathogens.
No child in India has been diagnosed with polio for nearly two years now
 and all the indications are that the virus responsible for it is no 
longer circulating here. However, the country’s polio surveillance 
system has indicated a sharp increase during recent years in the number 
of non-polio AFP cases.
Alarming data
Data published by the World Health Organisation show that close to 8,000
 non-polio AFP cases were identified in India during 2003. They went up 
to over 12,000 the following year, more than 26,000 in 2005 and crossed 
40,000 by 2007. In 2011, there were more than 60,000 non-polio AFP 
cases.
A good polio surveillance system ought to pick up all AFP cases among 
children so that they can be screened for poliovirus infection. On 
average, only about one child out of every 200 children carrying the 
poliovirus develops AFP. Such cases must be identified so that 
appropriate immunisation measures can be undertaken.
India’s polio surveillance shows that the country is polio-free. But it 
also indicates that the country now has the world’s highest rate of 
non-polio AFP cases. According to data published in WHO’s Weekly Epidemiological Record,
 India’s annualised non-polio AFP rate for 2011 stood at 15.06 per one 
lakh children below 15 years of age, compared to a global rate that year
 of 5.48.
Moreover, most of the country’s non-polio AFP cases occur in just two 
States — Bihar and Uttar Pradesh. They accounted for about 61 per cent 
of the 53,000-odd non-polio AFP cases identified in the country in 2012,
 according to data from WHO’s National Polio Surveillance Project. As a 
result, the two States have far higher annualised non-polio AFP rates 
than other States — around 34 for Bihar and about 23 for Uttar Pradesh. 
The rate for the country as a whole is slightly over 12.
“The increased non-polio AFP rate is due to increased reporting of AFP 
cases due to deliberate efforts of the programme to increase the 
sensitivity of the surveillance system since 2004,” according to the WHO
 Country Office for India. In a written response provided to this 
correspondent, the health body said these efforts were more intense and 
closely monitored in the traditionally polio-endemic states of Bihar and
 U.P., resulting in even higher rates of reporting of AFP cases in those
 States. 
In 2004, a number of steps were initiated to strengthen surveillance in 
order to accurately and more rapidly detect all polio cases in the 
country, it said. Those measures included expanding the definition of 
AFP; increasing the number of AFP reporting sites; increasing the number
 of active surveillance visits; and more training for health 
professionals on what constituted an AFP case.
Since then, the number of AFP cases that were reported and investigated 
continued to increase, it noted. This was not due to an increase in the 
incidence of a specific disease that might cause these symptoms. Rather,
 it was the direct result of surveillance activities for AFP cases being
 strengthened.
The programme in India had taken a much broader interpretation of what 
would qualify as an AFP case than other countries have. Although facial 
paralysis would not be part of a standard definition of AFP, it was 
included in that definition for India. Other similar examples were 
diseases like meningo-encephalitis, Bells palsy, post-diphtheria 
polyneuritis and spinal muscular atrophy. Data had shown that broadening
 the case definition led to the detection of some polio cases that would
 have otherwise been missed, the WHO Country Office noted.
Moreover, in the remaining polio-endemic countries of Nigeria, Pakistan 
and Afghanistan too, efforts to strengthen polio surveillance were 
resulting in increased non-polio AFP cases being reported, it added.
The high non-polio AFP rates in the country ought to be a “red flag”, 
remarked T. Jacob John, a leading virologist who was with Christian 
Medical College, Vellore, and is known for his work on polio 
eradication.
With heightened polio surveillance, sick children with suspected 
paralysis or possible neurological maladies were being identified and 
tested by the polio surveillance system, he remarked. However, the 
neurological disorders given by the WHO Country Office as examples of 
the expanded definition of AFP were likely to account for only a small 
part of the increase in non-polio AFP cases being seen in India.
No clear picture
Unfortunately, the cases of children with non-polio AFP were not being 
monitored by either the polio eradication programme or the larger state 
health care system. As a result, there was no clear picture of what was 
causing the AFP, the kind of diseases these children displayed, or how 
many of them were seriously affected, he pointed out.
A range of non-polio pathogens could produce AFP, said Dr. John. With 
many such pathogens, the paralysis they caused would often disappear in a
 short period of time. However, others were capable of causing quite 
serious diseases, disability and even death.
Two teams of Indian scientists recently studied the sorts of 
enteroviruses found in children with non-polio AFP. Enteroviruses are a 
diverse group, most of which replicate in the alimentary tract. The 
poliovirus is part of this group. Several non-polio enteroviruses have 
been associated with a range of acute and chronic human diseases, 
including polio-like paralysis.
In a study published in 2009, a team at the Sanjay Gandhi Postgraduate 
Institute of Medical Sciences in Lucknow tested over 46,000 stool 
samples from children with AFP in U.P., Bihar and other northern States 
between 2004 and 2007. In the other study, C. Durga Rao of the Indian 
Institute of Science, Bangalore, and his colleagues looked for 
enteroviruses in stool samples collected from more than 2,700 children 
with non-polio AFP in Kerala, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh between 2007 
and 2009.
Enteroviruses
Both groups found that only about 30 per cent of the non-polio AFP cases
 were associated with enteroviruses. These viruses could therefore only 
partially explain the non-polio AFP cases being detected.
In a paper published early last year in the Indian Journal of Medical Ethics,
 Neetu Vashisht and Jacob Puliyel of the St. Stephens Hospital, Delhi, 
gave another perspective on the issue. Children in Bihar and U.P. have 
received more doses of oral polio vaccine than elsewhere in the country.
 The oral vaccine, it was found, became less efficacious in the face of 
gut infections and diarrhoea that were widely prevalent in those States.
In their paper, Dr. Vashisht and Dr. Puliyel analysed the non-polio AFP 
rates across all States over 10 years up to 2010, and found that the 
rate “increased in proportion to the number of polio vaccine doses 
received in each area.” In 2012, the number of doses of oral vaccine 
given to children in Bihar and U.P. had come down and, for the first 
time, there was a decrease in the non-polio AFP cases in those States, 
Dr. Puliyel told this correspondent.
There was need for “a critical appraisal to find the factors 
contributing to the increase in non-polio AFP with increase in OPV [oral
 polio vaccine] doses — perhaps looking at the influence of strain 
shifts of entero-pathogens induced by the vaccine,” said Dr. Vashisht 
and Dr. Puliyel in the paper.
The non-polio AFP rate was not correlated with the number of oral 
vaccine doses that were administered, countered the WHO Country Office 
in its response. The largest number of oral vaccine doses given in India
 was in 2004, which had the lowest non-polio AFP rate in the last eight 
years. Moreover, although the number of oral vaccine doses given in the 
country had shown a continuous decline since 2007, the non-polio AFP 
rate had increased during the same period. In Bihar and U.P. too, there 
were similar trends of reduced oral vaccine doses and rising AFP rates 
during 2007-2011.
“The ICMR [Indian Council of Medical Research] is leading the 
investigations into non-polio causes of AFP,” the WHO Country Office 
stated.
 
 
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