Brief History of Polio
1953
First inactivated polio vaccine created by Dr. Jonas Salk
The first inactivated polio vaccine (known as IPV) was created by Dr. Jonas Salk. Inactivated vaccines mean they are using the killed version of the virus. Human trials began in 1954, and by 1955 Salk’s vaccine was available throughout the US. The incidence of paralytic polio decreased dramatically between 1954 and 1961. However, the antibodies wore off within a few years of this iteration of the vaccine and creation of the vaccine had led to the sacrifice of many monkeys (they needed monkey kidney cells to propagate the virus). The Henrietta Lacks cell line (HeLa cells) at Tuskegee University soon replaced rhesus monkey cells as cells of choice for evaluating the Salk polio vaccine and measuring the quantity of antibodies that developed in response to poliovirus infection.