Vaccine-Derived Poliovirus Infection among Patients with Primary Immunodeficiency and Effect of Patient Screening on Disease Outcomes, Iran
Mohammadreza Shaghaghi
1, Shohreh Shahmahmoodi
1, Ali Nili, Hassan Abolhassani, Seyedeh Panid Madani, Ahmad Nejati, Maryam Yousefi, Yaghoob M. Kandelousi, Mona Irannejad, Shiva Shaghaghi, Seyed Mohsen Zahraei, Sussan Mahmoudi, Mohammad Mehdi Gouya, Reza Yazdani, Gholamreza Azizi, Nima Parvaneh, and Asghar Aghamohammadi
Author affiliations: Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland, USA (M. Shaghaghi); Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran (M. Shaghaghi, S. Shahmahmoodi, A. Nili, H. Abolhassani, S.P. Madani, A. Nejati, M. Yousefi, Y.M. Kandelousi, M. Irannejad, S. Shaghaghi, R. Yazdani, N. Parvaneh, A. Aghamohammadi); Research Center for Immunodeficiencies, Tehran (M. Shaghaghi, A. Nili, H. Abolhassani, S.P. Madani, M. Irannejad, S. Shaghaghi, R. Yazdani, N. Parvaneh, A. Aghamohammadi); Karolinska University Hospital Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden (H. Abolhassani); Ministry of Health and Medical Education, Tehran (S.M. Zahraei, S. Mahmoudi, M.M. Gouya); Alborz University of Medical Sciences, Karaj, Iran (G. Azizi); Non-Communicable Diseases Research Center, Karaj (G. Azizi)
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Figure 1
Figure 1. Patient ages at the time of first stool screening in study of vaccine-derived poliovirus infection among patients with primary immunodeficiency, by category of primary immunodeficiencies, Iran, 1995–2018.
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