1. Introduction to GMRLN
The World Health Organization (WHO) Global Measles and Rubella Laboratory Network (GMRLN) was developed using the model of the Global Polio Laboratory Network (GPLN) and the Measles Laboratory Network for the Region of the Americas as its foundation. In 1994, the Region of the Americas was certified as polio-free and, by the latter half of the 1990s, was making progress toward measles elimination. Other WHO regions had also made progress towards achieving polio-free status and were successively implementing a phased approach from control to outbreak prevention to measles elimination phases. By 1998, 115 countries had a measles elimination goal. The laboratory-based surveillance strategies for the first two phases were primarily testing a limited number of cases to confirm outbreaks and suspected spread cases. In the control and outbreak prevention phases, case confirmation was based on the detection of measles- and rubella-specific immunoglobulin M (IgM) in serum samples, though several laboratories were attempting to isolate the virus for genetic characterization. Once countries reached the elimination phase, with an incidence rate of <1 case/100,000 population, laboratories were expected to test all suspected cases and investigate virus transmission patterns to monitor interruption of endemic viral transmission. Specimens testing negative for measles IgM were tested for evidence of rubella IgM.
The GMRLN was built gradually as resources allowed, progress towards disease control was achieved, and elimination goals were set for measles and, later, for rubella. Although the GPLN was used as a model, many more laboratories were needed for the GMRLN, with almost all countries planning to have a measles-rubella laboratory. For the GMRLN, three tiers of laboratories were established. National laboratories (NLs), as nominated by member states, have a close link to national immunization and surveillance programs. Regional reference laboratories (RRLs) were designated from those laboratories demonstrating molecular testing capacity, a strong environment of quality control (QC) and quality assurance (QA), and the capacity to support NLs in their region. Finally, global specialized laboratories (GSLs) with strong technical expertise were established to support the development of protocols, establish QA and QC programs, and provide training and capacity strengthening for network laboratories at all levels. In some large countries, sub-national laboratories (SNLs) have been added to the network to share the burden of work. Financial resources were primarily from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (US-CDC), and technical support was provided by WHO, US-CDC, the United Kingdom Health Security Agency (UKHSA), the Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory (VIDRL) in Australia, the National Microbiology Laboratory, at the Public Health Agency of Canada, and the National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Japan and RRLs.
Standardization, quality assurance, and timely and accurate reporting were the foundation of the GMRLN. An evaluation of commercially available IgM assays was conducted [
1], a laboratory manual was developed and printed in English, French, Chinese, Russian, and Spanish, and annual global serology proficiency and accreditation programs were established in 1999–2000. The standardized WHO nomenclature to describe measles virus genetic characteristics was established at a meeting in 1998 [
2]. Since 1997, training workshops covering IgM testing and reporting were held for new laboratories, and essential equipment, test kits, and reagents were provided according to the resource needs of each laboratory. On-site accreditation reviews by laboratory experts enabled the comprehensive, standardized assessment of a laboratory’s layout, function, staffing, and interaction with surveillance programs, as well as monitoring performance over the past 12 months. The first GMRLN meeting was held in 2001 to obtain consensus on the development of the laboratory network, strengthen the integration of rubella testing, and develop a plan for improving genetic surveillance and the investigation of new technologies. At the time of the first global meeting, the GMRLN consisted of 3 GSLs, 7 RRLs, and 78 NLs (n = 88). However, the GMRLN expanded rapidly, and by 2012, there were almost 700 laboratories in the network. All countries had access to proficient laboratories or were served by one. In addition, routine testing for measles and rubella IgM exceeded 200,000 tests annually; 10,000 measles and rubella sequences had been submitted to the global databases, and annual proficiency testing, and accreditation programs were in place. The GMRLN continues to expand and support elimination quality surveillance for measles and rubella worldwide.
3. Structure of Regional Networks
The GMRLN regional networks align with established WHO regions, the African Region (AFR), the Region of the Americas (AMR), the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR), the European Region (EUR), the South-East Asia Region (SEAR), and the Western Pacific Region (WPR). The AFR is divided into three sub-regions: Central Africa, Western Africa, and Eastern and Southern Africa. The number of RRLs in each region varies, and there is at least one NL in most member states (
Figure 1 and
Figure 2). Many countries have a network of SNLs. All laboratories perform serologic testing, and a growing number of laboratories have molecular testing capacity (
Table 1).
In the AFR, there are three RRLs located in Uganda, South Africa, and Côte d’Ivoire. There are a total of 48 NLs including those in Algeria, Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Republic of Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Eritrea, Ethiopia, Eswatini, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritius, Mauritania, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria (7), Rwanda, Seychelles, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Africa, South Sudan, Tanzania, Togo, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. There are four SNLs in AFR, including one in DRC, two in Ethiopia and one in Mozambique.
In the AMR, there is 1 GSL/RRL, the US-CDC, 2 RRLs located in Brazil and Canada, and 20 NLs including Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. The laboratory in Trinidad and Tobago (Caribbean Public Health Agency) functions as a sub-regional reference laboratory for the Caribbean. In addition to WHO-accredited laboratories, some countries independently manage a network of SNLs, including 27 in Argentina, 27 in Brazil, 26 in Canada, 3 in Colombia, 2 in Ecuador, and 31 in Mexico. In the US, the US-CDC supports four vaccine-preventable disease reference centers [
5], which provide laboratory testing support to multiple state health laboratories and departments.
In the EMR, there are two RRLs located in Oman and Tunisia, plus a sub-regional reference laboratory located in Pakistan. There are 22 NLs in total in Iran, Iraq, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Bahrain, Djibouti, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Palestine, Qatar, Somalia, Syria, United Arab Emirates, Tunisia, and 2 in Yemen. There are a few countries with SNL networks, including Afghanistan with 9 and Somalia with 11.
In the EUR, there is one GSL, the UKHSA, and three RRLs located in Luxembourg, Germany, and the Russian Federation. The region includes 49 NLs located in Albania, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Georgia, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, 2 in France, 2 in the Netherlands, and 2 in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The EUR region also has countries with SNLs that are part of the GMRLN, including 1 in Kyrgyzstan, 1 in Ukraine, 7 in Turkey, and 10 in the Russian Federation. Three countries (Italy, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine) independently coordinate their own SNL networks, and the NL from four additional countries have collaborating laboratories under their supervision (Finland, Norway, Romania, and Sweden).
In the SEAR, there are three RRLs, one in Thailand and two in India. There is a total of 19 NLs, including 7 in India, 4 in Indonesia, and 1 each in Bangladesh, Bhutan, DPR Korea, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Timor-Leste. The SNL network in SEAR consists of 18 in India, 4 in Indonesia, 1 in Nepal, and 13 in Thailand.
In the WPR, there is 1 GSL, the National Institute for Infectious Disease (NIID), located in Japan, 3 RRLs located in China, Hong Kong, and Australia, and 17 NLs, including 2 in Vietnam and 1 each in Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Fiji, French Polynesia, Guam, Lao PDR, Macau, Malaysia, Mongolia, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Republic of Korea, and Singapore. There are 13 accredited SNLs in the region: seven in the Philippines, two in Vietnam, and four in Malaysia. China established 32 WHO-accredited provincial and 339 prefectural laboratories accredited by China CDC. The GSL in Japan also independently coordinates its own SNL network.
4. Testing and Quality Control in GMRLN
The GMRLN supports measles and rubella surveillance by performing laboratory testing for confirmation of infection and conducting genetic characterization of circulating viruses. All the 762 laboratories perform serologic confirmation for measles and rubella infection. Serologic testing is primarily the detection of measles- and rubella-specific IgM in serum samples. GMRLN laboratories use commercial kits for IgM detection, and the quality of the kits is monitored by the GMRLN. In 2023, the GMRLN performed over 600,000 serologic tests, a significant increase in testing from 2022 (
Table 2). While IgM detection is still considered the standard test for case confirmation, especially in endemic countries, many countries have included the detection of viral RNA by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in the testing algorithm. As countries move towards the elimination of measles and rubella, molecular testing will play an increasingly important role.
The GMRLN is responsible for the genetic characterization of wild-type measles and rubella viruses. Laboratories obtain sequence information by amplification of sequencing templates from clinical samples. The current standard protocols call for sequencing either the 450 nucleotides coding for the COOH terminal 150 amino acid region of the measles nucleoprotein gene (N-450) or 739 nucleotides from the rubella E1 gene (E1-739). Sanger sequencing methods are widely used in the GMRLN. Sequence data are submitted to the WHO global nucleotide surveillance databases, MeaNS and RubeNS. It should be noted that sequence analysis is required to distinguish between a measles vaccine reaction and infection with a wild-type virus, though vaccine-specific RT-PCR assays are being introduced in some countries [
6]. The GMRLN is developing methods and quality control standards for next-generation sequencing (NGS), which will allow laboratories to obtain whole genome sequences (WGS).
In addition to the standard testing methods, GSLs and RRLs perform referral testing to help with case confirmation and case classification. Testing for immunoglobulin G (IgG) avidity is usually performed in an enzyme-linked immune assay format. High avidity IgG indicates past infection or previous vaccination with measles- or rubella-containing vaccine, while low avidity IgG is consistent with recent vaccination or infection. Avidity testing has been useful for ruling out rubella infections when IgM testing gives false positive results and for distinguishing between primary and secondary vaccine failure in measles breakthrough cases [
7].
The GMRLN supports the evaluation of population immunity through serosurveys. Until recently, the most common method was enzyme immunoassay (EIA) to detect measles and rubella IgG. Only a few specialized laboratories can perform virus neutralization assays, which are the most sensitive assays for measuring virus-specific IgG concentrations. More recently, multiplexed bead assays (MBAs) have been employed to measure IgG for measles and rubella [
8]. The MBA has a sensitivity equivalent to virus neutralization, is amenable to a high throughput format, and can be performed with a small amount of serum. Simultaneous testing for measles and rubella IgG saves time and resources.
As countries move towards the elimination of measles and rubella, an assessment of the quality of surveillance activities is necessary to demonstrate adequate support for verification of elimination. Five of the eight core surveillance performance indicators assess the quality and timeliness of laboratory testing and should be reported by countries to WHO regional offices. These include a proportion of countries reporting to their WHO regional office on time (target: 100%), reporting discarded non-measles non-rubella cases at the national level (target: ≥2 cases per 100,000 population per year), the proportion of suspected cases with adequate specimens for detecting acute measles or rubella infection collected and tested in a proficient laboratory (target: ≥80%), the proportion of laboratory-confirmed chains of transmission with samples adequate for detecting measles or rubella virus collected and tested in an accredited laboratory (target: ≥80%), and proportion of results reported by the laboratory within 4 days of specimen receipt (target: ≥80%). Satisfactory performance by the GMRLN in each country is a prerequisite for verification of elimination.
Quality control is the hallmark of the GMRLN. It is important that all laboratories provide accurate and consistent results to national immunization programs. Quality is improved by sharing protocols for validated methods within the network. The GMRLN has developed a detailed laboratory manual containing chapters on laboratory testing and detailed, regularly updated protocols for standard tests. The latest version of the manual was published in 2018 [
9].
The GMRLN laboratories are required to participate in annual proficiency testing (PT) for measles and rubella IgM detection. The serologic PT panels for the NLs are provided by the VIDRL in Melbourne, Australia. As of 2023, there were 144 laboratories participating in the PT program. During the 2023 round of PT, 97% of laboratories submitting measles results and 98% of laboratories submitting rubella results obtained a passing score. As of May 2024, 223 laboratories submitted results for the 2023 PT program; there are additional laboratories still to submit results for this panel. For 2022, 245 laboratories participated in the PT program, and 99% of laboratories submitting measles results and 99% of laboratories submitting rubella results obtained a passing score. For those member states that have large SNL networks, the NLs are responsible for administering country-specific serology PT. The VIDRL provides training workshops for preparing and evaluating PT panels.
To fulfill requirements for WHO accreditation, in addition to passing the PT, NLs need to send 10% of tested specimens or at least 50 specimens annually to the RRL for confirmatory testing. There must be at least 90% concurrence between the results of the NL and the RRL for the NL to obtain full accreditation status. For any laboratory not reaching the minimum concurrence or not submitting samples for QC, its accreditation standing may reflect a provisional status until it returns to compliance.
The purpose of the mEQA program of the GMRLN is to assess the ability of network laboratories to perform molecular testing. Molecular testing includes assays to detect viral RNA, i.e., real-time RT-PCR (rRT-PCR) or endpoint RT-PCR for rubella, as well as assays used for routine genotyping (measles N-450 and rubella E1-739). Additionally, all GMRLN laboratories that report sequences to the global databases, MeaNS and RubeNS, are required to pass the sequencing portion of the mEQA. In 2022, 119 NLs participated in the mEQA for measles, and 108 participated for rubella. Of these, 95% and 96% passed measles and rubella proficiency testing, respectively. Laboratories that fail any portion of the mEQA must pass a repeat test before they can submit sequence data to the global databases. Countries with a large SNL network are responsible for country-specific mEQA. US-CDC provides training workshops to NLs preparing mEQA panels to ensure consistency with proficiency testing.
WHO accredits all GMRLN laboratories based on a standard checklist of requirements. Accreditation is achieved by onsite visits as well as desk reviews. New laboratories will receive an initial onsite accreditation followed by onsite visits every 2–5 years, depending on the region. Most laboratories are required to complete the accreditation checklist for desk review annually. The Accreditation WG completed a revised version of the checklist in 2024.
8. Achievements and Challenges
Overall, the performance of the GMRLN has remained high despite many challenges. While the most significant challenge was the disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, other challenges include limited financial resources for testing and regional coordination, staff turnover in national laboratories, updating molecular epidemiology, integration of new technologies, expansion of the network, lack of serum samples for the serologic proficient testing program, and developing testing strategies for pre- and post-elimination settings. Laboratory surveillance indicators in all regions remain high, although many countries struggle to meet the discard rate of 2/100,000 population.
Now that global travel has returned to pre-pandemic levels, the GMRLN has been able to address staff turnover by providing training opportunities for new staff. These trainings help build a stable and competent workforce, increase capacity, and introduce new or modified testing methods. To address the training needs for this increasing network, regional training capacity will need improvement with the assignment of regional training focal points and continuation of the TTT programs.
The Measles and Rubella Strategic Framework 2021–2030 [
17], developed as part of the Immunization Agenda 2030 (IA2030) [
18], reinforces measles and rubella elimination as a critical goal. In addition, IA2030 calls for using measles as a tracer to identify weaknesses in immunization programs. Therefore, strong laboratory-based surveillance will be a critical factor in monitoring programmatic achievements. Many countries are now expanding their domestic laboratory capacity by enrolling new laboratories, so the GMRLN keeps expanding. Robust serology and molecular EQA programs monitor the performance of the network laboratories. With that expansion also comes a greater need for EQA programs, creating an increased demand for WHO-coordinated EQA programs. Several countries have established EQA programs for SNLs, and efforts are underway to train national laboratories in larger countries with an SNL network to conduct their own EQA programs. The RLCs have worked with VIRDL to identify sources of serum samples for the serologic proficiency testing program.
The WHO remains committed to continue coordinating the GMRLN through its GLC and RLCs by organizing regular meetings and workshops. Resources are needed to maintain regional coordination for the GMRLN. A game-changer for the network has been the IRR, which took over the provision of proficiency test panels, diagnostic kits, and reagents from the WHO, significantly increasing delivery speed in most countries. RLCs work with the CDC to manage the distribution of materials and monitor inventories to minimize stockouts.
During the pandemic, a major investment was made to introduce molecular testing capacity for SARS-CoV-2 on a wide scale. This created an opportunity to introduce routine molecular testing for other pathogens. Many of the laboratory staff in measles and rubella laboratories have been trained in molecular diagnostics, and with the widespread availability of equipment, many of these laboratories are now adding rRT-PCR for measles and rubella to their portfolio as an added tool to confirm suspect cases. The pandemic also made sequencing accessible to many more laboratories. The GMRLN must make sure network laboratories have the capacity to use rRT-PCR as part of the case confirmation algorithm and generate high-quality sequence data to monitor viral transmission pathways. New, validated protocols and subsequent training will be needed. The GMRLN will continue its reliance on the MeaNS and RubeNS databases, particularly now that many laboratories are transitioning to NGS. Viral genetic diversity has decreased in recent years, creating a need to better describe genetic variability with measles and rubella genotypes. Therefore, there is a critical need to expand capacity for sequencing and to develop an updated nomenclature to describe intragenotype variation.
With an ever-increasing laboratory network, one of the biggest challenges for the GMRLN is its need to diversify its source of funding to maintain and expand its capacity and capability. The US-CDC has been a generous provider of resources to the GMRLN since its inception, not only in funds but also in technical assistance, staff training, and the provision of quality laboratory management programs. This support has been crucial to the GMRLN’s development. There has also been a strong reliance on the GPLN since the initiation of the GMRLN. Many investments made into building infrastructure and laboratory capacity in the GPLN have been beneficial to other vaccine-preventable disease laboratory networks such as GMRLN, Yellow Fever, and rotavirus [
19]. This synergy has been very beneficial and a cost-effective use of donor support. With polio eradication approaching, a process of transition has been initiated as described in the Strategic Action Plan on Polio Transition [
20]. This transition creates a need to integrate activities between polio and other programs, including laboratory networks. A revised action plan is under development to describe the opportunities during transition. The WHO has developed a global strategy for comprehensive vaccine-preventable disease (VPD) surveillance [
21,
22]. This strategy promotes the development of comprehensive high-functioning surveillance systems that encompass all VPD threats faced by a country in all areas and populations, wherever possible, taking advantage of the shared infrastructure for components of surveillance such as data management and laboratory systems.
One of the five main objectives of the global strategy is to strengthen and expand public health laboratory networks. The GMRLN has an excellent capacity to conduct basic and advanced laboratory testing, as shown by the outcomes of the accreditation and quality control programs. Therefore, the GMRLN is well-positioned to support high-quality laboratory-based surveillance for measles and rubella and to transition to supporting laboratory testing for other pathogens, including vaccine-preventable diseases. Expansion of the GMRLN will be based on the guiding principles of high-quality testing, outstanding quality control, and integration with national and regional disease control plans.