July 2, 2021
![Lab worker wearing lab coat, safety goggles and using a pipette on a blue green background.](https://training-formation.phac-aspc.gc.ca/pluginfile.php/1/local_pages/pagecontent/NewsLetterHeader.png)
Poliovirus Potentially Infectious Material
All World Health Organization member states have made an international commitment for the containment of polioviruses. This includes setting up a national poliovirus inventory. The Centre for Biosecurity maintains and updates the National Poliovirus Inventory for facilities that handle or store poliovirus and potentially infectious material.
Poliovirus potentially infectious materials are:
- human fecal samples
- respiratory samples
- concentrated sewage samples
- derivatives of the above
They must have been:
- stored in conditions that support poliovirus survival and
- collected:
- where poliovirus was circulating or
- when oral polio vaccine (oral polio virus Sabin) was in use
Poliovirus in clinical or environmental specimens survive:
- indefinitely in the laboratory freezer (≤-20°C)
- for many months in the refrigerator
- for hours-to-days on the laboratory bench-top
Laboratories storing eradicated wild-type poliovirus must obtain certification under the World Health Organization's Global Action Plan III as a Poliovirus-Essential Facility.
You may have poliovirus potentially infectious material if you have samples from a time and place where any of the following were circulating:
- wild poliovirus
- vaccine-derived poliovirus
- oral polio vaccine (Sabin)
The World Health Organization published a guidance document to help facilities determine whether they possess potentially infectious material.
If you believe you have poliovirus potentially infectious material, contact the Centre for Biosecurity (biosafety.biosecurite@phac-aspc.gc.ca).