While the goal of polio virus eradication is in sight, there are concerns about post-eradication manufacturing and stockpiling vaccine stores containing live virus that could escape and repopulate the environment.
Different types of polio vaccines currently exist, but none are optimal from a safety point of view.
Live attenuated (weakened) vaccine strains carry genetic mutations that prevent them from causing disease, but they can - in rare cases - revert to more dangerous virus.
Inactivated vaccines are themselves safe, but their production at present involves growing large amounts of wild-type (ie active virulent) virus that is then killed with a chemical called formalin.
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After eradication, the World Health Organisation (WHO) plans to stop the use of live-attenuated polio vaccines.
WHO has strongly encouraged new manufacturers to switch the source of inactivated virus from virulent wild-type strains to an attenuated strain, named Sabin.
Arguing that the attenuated Sabin strain is unstable and therefore potentially problematic, Philip Minor, from the National Institute for Biological Standards and Control in UK, and colleagues presented data on alternative attenuated strains which they propose as a safer alternative source for inactivated vaccine.
Based on this knowledge, they modified a particular region of the viral RNA in ways that they predicted would make the resulting strains genetically stable.
They then compared these new strains with both the original Sabin vaccine strain and the wild-type strain currently used in the production of inactivated vaccine.
Besides testing the genetic stability of the new strains, the researchers examined their ability to grow in tissue culture (necessary for vaccine production), their risk for causing paralysis in mice carrying a human polio-virus receptor, and whether they effectively immunised rats.
"We have developed new strains for IPV (Inactivated polio vaccine) production with negligible risk to the human population should they escape," the researchers said.
The attributes of the new strains "allow for safe vaccine production in the post-eradication world," they said.
The study was published in the PLOS Pathogens.