What is polio and is the UK public at risk?
Explainer: Traces in London sewage leads to concern
virus that causes disease could gain foothold in areas with low vaccination
rates
Ian Sample
Science editor
@iansample
Wed 22 Jun
2022 16.24 BST
Routine
surveillance has picked up traces of poliovirus in sewage from north and east
London, raising concerns that the infection could spread and cause harm,
particularly among young children who are not vaccinated against the disease.
What is
polio?
Poliomyelitis,
or polio, is a highly infectious viral disease that mostly affects the
under-fives. There are three types of poliovirus that cause infection, but
after mass-vaccination programmes the disease is now rare in most parts of the
world. The UK’s last natural polio infection was in 1984 and the country was
declared polio-free in 2003. Polio is still found in Afghanistan, Nigeria and
Pakistan.
What are
the symptoms?
Most people
who contract polio won’t have symptoms and will fight the virus off without
knowing they were infected. But a small number develop a flu-like illness up to
three weeks after infection. They can experience a fever, sore throat,
headache, stomach pain, aching muscles and feeling sick. In a small fraction of
cases, about 1 in 100 to 1 in 1000, the virus damages nerves in the spine and
base of the brain. This can cause paralysis, usually in the legs, over the
course of a few hours or days. The first symptoms of paralysis are the rapid
onset of weakness in a limb, but sometimes muscles in the head and neck. If
muscles used for breathing are affected, the infection can be life-threatening.
How does
polio spread?
Poliovirus
multiplies in the intestines and mainly spreads through the faecal-oral route,
meaning that people shed the virus in their faeces and pass it on when their
hands become contaminated in the toilet. It can also spread through
contaminated water and food, and less commonly through coughs and sneezes.
What
vaccinations are available?
An oral
polio vaccine is used in countries that are in the process of eradicating the
disease. The vaccine contains weakened, live strains of polio that grow briefly
in the gut and provide a high level of immunity against the virus. The UK and
many other countries used to use this, but switched in 2004 to an inactivated
polio vaccine, which is injected and contains a killed poliovirus that cannot
replicate in the body. Vaccinations are offered through the NHS when a child is
eight, 12 and 16 weeks old, as part of the 6-in-1 vaccine; when they are three
years and four months old as part of the 4-in-1 pre-school booster, and at 14
years old as part of the 3-in-1 teenage booster.
What is
vaccine-derived poliovirus?
People who
are given the oral polio vaccine can shed the weakened virus for several weeks
afterwards. On rare occasions, this shed virus can spread and cause outbreaks
of “vaccine-derived” poliovirus. These viruses have lost the mutations that
weakened them, making them more like the original poliovirus found in nature.
How did the
UK detect poliovirus?
Health
officials analyse samples of sewage from London and Glasgow biweekly. The
surveillance typically picks up between one and three unrelated cases of
poliovirus every year. These come from people who have received the oral polio
vaccine abroad and are still shedding the virus in their stools when they
return to the UK.
What is
different this year?
In
February, sewage from the Beckton sewage treatment works, which processes waste
from 4 million people in north and east London, tested positive for poliovirus.
As a one off, this would not have raised the alarm. But tests in April revealed
a genetically related poliovirus, which has continued to evolve and be detected
in the waste ever since. This suggests there may be limited spread of the virus
in the area. Public health officials are now testing sewage upstream of the
Beckton plant to narrow down the source of the virus, named “vaccine-derived”
poliovirus type 2 (VDPV2).
What is the
risk?
So far, no
cases of polio or related paralysis have been reported in the UK, but doctors
have been urged to be vigilant for patients who come in with symptoms of the
disease. The concern is that the vaccine-derived poliovirus could gain a
foothold in areas where polio vaccination rates are low. The longer the virus
spreads, the greater the risk of it causing severe disease, particularly in
young unvaccinated children who could become paralysed.
What is the
advice?
While the
risk to the general public is considered low, public health officials are
urging people to make sure they and their children are up to date with their
polio vaccinations, which are highly effective at preventing paralysis caused
by poliovirus.

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