| Literature DB >> 1971669 |
M Pacqué1, B Muñoz, B M Greene, A T White, Z Dukuly, H R Taylor.
Abstract
In a study of the safety, acceptability, and efficacy of ivermectin for community-based mass treatment of onchocerciasis, the drug was issued twice, one year apart, to the population of a rubber plantation (14,000 people) in Liberia, where over 80% of the adults have Onchocerca volvulus infection. The plantation microfilarial load in a sample of adults was reduced by 86% 6 months after initial treatment and by 78% after 1 year. Compliance was 97% with each round of treatment. After the initial treatment of 7699 people, 101 (1.3%) had moderate adverse reactions. After re-treatment only 37 (0.5%) people had moderate adverse reactions. No ivermectin-related death or severe adverse reactions occurred. The data show that community-based treatment with ivermectin is well accepted and effective in reducing microfilarial loads. Ivermectin is likely to provide the first realistic means of chemotherapy-based control of onchocerciasis on a mass scale.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 1971669 DOI: 10.1016/0140-6736(90)91253-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet ISSN: 0140-6736 Impact factor: 79.321