| Literature DB >> 14975060 |
Abstract
This paper presents a summary of reported cases of Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) following treatment with Mectizan(R) (ivermectin, Merck, Sharpe & Dohme) in onchocerciasis mass treatment programs from January 1, 1989 to December 31, 2001 through a passive surveillance system. A total of 207 SAE cases were reported out of approximately 165 million reported treatments delivered during the period under review, giving rise to a cumulative incidence of 1 reported SAE per 800,000 reported treatments. The mean age was 40 years and 70% of the cases were males. The mean time between ivermectin intake and onset of illness was 1 day. For 57% of the cases (n = 118), that was their first exposure to ivermectin. The majority of cases were reported from Cameroon (n = 176; 85%) with peaks in the incidence of SAE reporting in 1989-1991 and 1994-1995 when the program expanded to ivermectin-naïve populations. Fifty-five percent of the cases from Cameroon (i.e. 97 out of 176 cases) were encephalopathic and were reported from the central-southern region of the country; two-thirds of these cases were 'probable' or 'possible' cases of Loa loa encephalopathy temporally related to ivermectin treatment. Reporting bias may explain some but not all of the differences in SAE reporting between the 34 onchocerciasis-endemic countries that have, or have had, mass treatment programs. Further research is needed to understand the apparent clustering of encephalopathy cases in central-southern Cameroon since L. loa infection alone probably does not explain the increased incidence of this type of SAE from this region.Entities:
Year: 2003 PMID: 14975060 PMCID: PMC2147655 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2883-2-S1-S3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Filaria J ISSN: 1475-2883
Figure 1Annual frequency of SAEs reported to have occurred following ivermectin mass treatment from 1989 to 2001* *cases reported as of August 31, 2002
Age distribution of SAE cases reported to have occurred following ivermectin mass treatment from 1989 to 2001*
| < 15 | 25 (12.5) |
| >= 15 < 30 | 55 (27.6) |
| >= 30 < 45 | 56 (28.1) |
| >= 45 < 60 | 36 (18.1) |
| >= 60 | 27 (13.6) |
*cases reported as of August 31, 2002; †the ages of 8 cases remain unknown.
Presenting symptoms and signs of SAE cases reported to have occurred following ivermectin mass treatment from 1989 to 2001*
| Difficulty or inability to stand or walk | 60 (29.0) | Altered Mental Status | 106 (51.2) |
| Feverishness | 54 (26.1) | Fever (documented) | 51 (24.6) |
| Headache | 52 (25.1) | Incontinence (urinary and/or fecal) | 42 (20.3) |
| General myalgia or arthralgia | 51 (24.6) | Dysarthria | 26 (12.6) |
| Fatigue/Asthenia | 40 (19.3) | Subconjunctival hemorrhage | 26 (12.6) |
| Diarrhea | 33 (15.9) | Rash and/or urticuria | 23 (11.1) |
| Vertigo | 31 (15.0) | Generalized edema | 16 (7.7) |
| Dyspnea | 22 (10.6) | Extremity edema | 16 (7.7) |
| Pruritis | 20 (9.7) | Facial edema | 15 (7.3) |
| Nausea or vomiting | 19 (9.1) | Hypotension (documented) | 13 (6.3) |
*cases reported as of August 31, 2002; †total of individual percentages is greater than 100 because most patients presented with multiple symptoms and signs.
Presumptive diagnostic categories assigned to reported SAE cases following Mectizan® treatment*
| Anaphylactic Reaction | Generalized immediate hypersensitivity response (urticaria, pruritis, angioedema, vascular collapse, life-threatening respiratory distress) after the administration of Mectizan® |
| Mild Mazzotti Reaction† | Manifestation of 2 or more of the following symptoms within 7 days of the administration of Mectizan®: pruritis, fever, headache, edema, lymphadenopathy, myalgia, generalized body aches |
| Severe Mazzotti Reaction† | Manifestation of 1 or both of the following symptoms within 7 days of the administration of Mectizan®: hypotension, asthma attacks in known patients; or manifestation of bullous skin lesions after 1–2 weeks of administration of Mectizan® |
| Functional Impairment with Normal Mental Status‡ | Manifestation of symptoms typical of Mild Mazzotti Reaction at a severity such that patient required assistance with Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) (eating, bathing, walking) but maintained normal mental status within 7 days of the administration of Mecizan |
| Neurologic | Encephalopathy, meningitis, or other neurologic sequelae within 7 days of the administration of Mectizan® |
| Cardiovascular | Cardiovascular symptoms and signs, excluding hypotension, within 7 days of the administration of Mectizan® |
| Pulmonary | Respiratory symptoms and signs, excluding Mazzotti-type bronchoconstriction, within 7 days of the administration of Mectizan® |
| Gastrointestinal | Gastrointestinal symptoms including dehydration within 7 days of the administration of Mectizan® |
| Other | Any other symptoms and signs within 7 days of the administration of Mectizan® |
*All cases met the definition of an SAE (See note 1) before being assigned one of these presumptive diagnoses; †adapted from McGavin DDM (1998). Opthalmology in the Tropics and Subtropics. In Manson's Tropical Diseases. 20th edn. (ed. GC Cook GC) W. B. Saunders Co. Ltd, London, p. 248; ‡adapted from Gardon J et al. [6].
Presumptive diagnoses of SAE cases reported to have occurred following ivermectin mass treatment from 1989 to 2001*
| Neurologic impairment | 110 (53.1) |
| Mild Mazzotti reaction | 43 (20.8) |
| Other or insufficient information to assign presumptive diagnosis | 22 (10.6) |
| Severe Mazzotti reaction | 17 (8.2) |
| Functional impairment with normal mental status | 6 (2.9) |
| Gastrointestinal illness | 5 (2.4) |
| Anaphylactic reaction | 3 (1.5) |
| Respiratory illness (except asthma attack in a known asthmatic which falls into the category of Severe Mazzotti reaction) | 1 (0.5) |
| Cardiovascular illness (except hypotension which falls into the category of Severe Mazzotti reaction | 0 (0) |
*cases reported as of August 31, 2002; †see Table 3 for definitions of presumptive diagnoses.
Therapeutic interventions used in the management of SAE cases reported to have occurred following ivermectin mass treatment from 1989 to 2001*
| Intravenous fluids | 132 (63.8) |
| Corticosteroids | 92 (44.4) |
| Analgesics/antipyretics | 84 (40.6) |
| Antimalarials | 76 (36.7) |
| Vitamin B complex | 75 (36.2) |
| Antibiotics | 51 (24.6) |
| Antihistamines | 48 (23.2) |
| Multivitamins | 30 (14.5) |
*cases reported as of August 31, 2002; †total of individual percentages is greater than 100 because multiple treatments were administered per person in most cases.
Known clinical outcomeof SAE cases reported to have occurred following ivermectin mass treatment from 1989 to 2001*
| Full recovery | 96 (70.1) |
| Full recovery (including neurologic) but other deficit persists | 4† (2.9) |
| Partial neurologic deficit | 9 (6.6) |
| Death | 28 (20.4) |
*cases reported as of August 31, 2002; †there were 2 cases of scarring due to drug skin reaction, 1 case of permanent soft tissue damage due to severe decubitus ulcers, and 1 case of nephrotic syndrome which predated the SAE; ‡the clinical outcome was not documented in 70 cases.
Figure 2Geographical distribution of all SAEs reported to have occurred following mass treatment with ivermectin from 1989 to 2001 (as of August 31, 2002)
Figure 3Proportion of SAEs reported to have occurred following ivermectin mass treatment from 1989 to 2001*, by reporting country; *cases reported as of August 31, 2002; † all reported cases from Sudan are from the southern region; ‡other reporting countries are Ethiopia (n = 1), Liberia (n = 1) and Central African Republic (n = 1).
Figure 4Annual frequency of SAEs reported to have occurred following ivermectin mass treatment from 1989 to 2001*, by reporting country; *cases reported as of August 31, 2002; †all reported cases from Sudan are from the southern region; ‡other reporting countries are Ethiopia (n = 1), Liberia (n = 1) and Central African Republic (n = 1).
Figure 5Incidence of reported SAEs following ivermectin mass treatment from selected countries in Central Africa, 1989 to 2001*; *cases reported as of August 31, 2002; † CAR=Central African Republic; DRC=Democratic Republic of Congo; ‡ all reported cases from Sudan are from the southern region.
Reported encephalopathic cases following ivermectin mass treatment from 1989 to 2001*
| Probable | 33 | 0 | 33 |
| Possible | 30 | 2§ | 32 |
| Encephalopathy of other known etiology | 1‡ | 0 | 1 |
| Encephalopathy of unknown etiology | 33 | 4|| | 37 |
*cases reported as of August 31, 2002; †See note 2 for definitions; ‡case of cerebral malaria; §Central African Republic = 1 case; Sudan (southern) = 1 case; ||Democratic Republic of Congo = 2 cases; Sudan (southern) = 1 case; Nigeria = 1 case.