In 2015, the Global Commission for the Certification of Polio Eradication certified the
eradication of type 2 wild poliovirus, 1 of 3 wild poliovirus serotypes causing paralytic
polio since the beginning of recorded history. This milestone was one of the key criteria
prompting the Global Polio Eradication Initiative to begin withdrawal of oral polio
vaccines (OPV), beginning with the type 2 component (OPV2), through a globally
synchronized initiative in April and May 2016 that called for all OPV using countries and
territories to simultaneously switch from use of trivalent OPV (tOPV; containing types 1,
2, and 3 poliovirus) to bivalent OPV (bOPV; containing types 1 and 3 poliovirus), thus
withdrawing OPV2. Before the switch, immunization programs globally had been using
approximately 2 billion tOPV doses per year to immunize hundreds of millions of children.
Thus, the globally synchronized withdrawal of tOPV was an unprecedented achievement in
immunization and was part of a crucial strategy for containment of polioviruses.
Successful implementation of the switch called for intense global coordination during
2015–2016 on an unprecedented scale among global public health technical agencies and
donors, vaccine manufacturers, regulatory agencies, World Health Organization (WHO) and
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) regional offices, and national governments.
Priority activities included cessation of tOPV production and shipment, national
inventories of tOPV, detailed forecasting of tOPV needs, bOPV licensing, scaling up of
bOPV production and procurement, developing national operational switch plans, securing
funding, establishing oversight and implementation committees and teams, training
logisticians and health workers, fostering advocacy and communications, establishing
monitoring and validation structures, and implementing waste management strategies. The
WHO received confirmation that, by mid May 2016, all 155 countries and territories that
had used OPV in 2015 had successfully withdrawn OPV2 by ceasing use of tOPV in their
national immunization programs. This article provides an overview of the global efforts
and challenges in successfully implementing this unprecedented global initiative,
including (1) coordination and tracking of key global planning milestones, (2) guidance
facilitating development of country specific plans, (3) challenges for planning and
implementing the switch at the global level, and (4) best practices and lessons learned in
meeting aggressive switch timelines. Lessons from this monumental public health
achievement by countries and partners will likely be drawn upon when bOPV is withdrawn
after polio eradication but also could be relevant for other global health initiatives
with similarly complex mandates and accelerated timelines.