Brazzaville – In the relentless fight against poliomyelitis, poliovirus diagnostic laboratories across the Africa region have emerged as the “silent hero”, playing a pivotal role in identifying the wild poliovirus type 1 outbreak that was detected in Malawi and Mozambique in 2021 and 2022 respectively.
Leading this team of “silent heroes” was the Polio Laboratory Network in Africa, which was meticulously conducting tests to track and characterise the virus. With its 16 World Health Organization (WHO) supported laboratories in the African region, the network continuously expanded its workforce, while ensuring timely and high-quality services for poliovirus detection.
With one in every 200 infections resulting in paralysis, laboratory investigations are critical to track the silently circulating polioviruses. Wastewater analysis in the laboratory is a very important way to monitor the potential circulation of polioviruses in a community. Without the work of the polio laboratories, some of these cases are likely to go undetected or unconfirmed, hampering containment and eradication efforts.
When a stool sample from a three-year-old boy suffering from paralysis near Lilongwe, Malawi, tested positive for wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1) in late 2021, the discovery set off a chain of rapid and coordinated actions, triggering urgent laboratory and field investigations into the circulation of the virus.
When the laboratory results were shared with the Polio team, Dr Anfumbom Kfutwah, Regional Polio Laboratory coordinator at the WHO Regional Office for Africa, immediately understood the severity of the situation. “Thanks to our laboratory network, we confirmed that this was an imported wild poliovirus type 1 genetically linked to a strain circulating in Pakistan’s Sidh province in 2019. This proved once again that polio knows no borders, and that every country remains at risk until polio is eradicated everywhere,” he says.
It was the first of such detection in Malawi in more than three decades, and Mozambique subsequently reported eight other WPV1 cases in northern Tete Province.
The laboratory network mobilized quickly, conducting widespread surveillance to identify and isolate cases. Contingency plans were put in place to accommodate the surge in community contact and sewage samples. Their unwavering commitment and technical expertise formed the backbone of the region's response, ensuring that no stone was left unturned in the battle against polio.
Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa, emphasizes the indispensable role of laboratories in the Africa region: “The laboratory network stands as a beacon of hope in our fight against polio. Their dedication and expertise are instrumental in our efforts to contain and eradicate this debilitating disease."
“After a thorough evaluation, an independent OBRA team, which rigorously assessed various facets of the outbreak response (two in-depth field reviews and supplementary data review) has concluded that there is no evidence of ongoing WPV1 transmission in Mozambique and Malawi,” Dr Jamal Ahmed, WHO AFRO Polio Eradication Programme coordinator, confirms.
The OBRA team also reviewed the quality of the outbreak response, including overall population immunity, supplementary immunization campaigns, routine immunization coverage, surveillance systems, vaccine management practices, and community engagement levels.
The fight against polio is not over, however, as variant poliovirus circulation persists in 26 African countries, with over 200 polioviruses in 26 countries in 2024 (as of mid-August, 2024). 59% (28/47) of countries in the African Region reported polio cases in the past year. This form of polio is equally dangerous, with the capacity to invade the nervous systems of children, causing paralysis or even death.
Polio has no cure, and the only way to prevent it is through immunization. The challenge is compounded by the fact that most infections are asymptomatic. This means they are not detected by Acute Flaccid Paralysis surveillance, which actively seeks out children with signs of paralysis to identify potential cases.
As such, laboratories are not only a key surveillance tool in maintaining the region´s certification as free of indigenous wild polio, but also in detecting and tracking ongoing outbreaks of circulating variant polioviruses (cVDPVs) that persist in Africa.
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