Literature DB >> 21624783

The epidemiological dynamics of infectious trachoma may facilitate elimination.

Thomas M Lietman1, Teshome Gebre, Berhan Ayele, Kathryn J Ray, M Cyrus Maher, Craig W See, Paul M Emerson, Travis C Porco.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Trachoma programs use mass distributions of oral azithromycin to treat the ocular strains of Chlamydia trachomatis that cause the disease. There is debate whether infection can be eradicated or only controlled. Mass antibiotic administrations clearly reduce the prevalence of chlamydia in endemic communities. However, perfect coverage is unattainable, and the World Health Organization's goal is to control infection to a level where resulting blindness is not a public health concern. Here, we use mathematical models to assess whether more ambitious goals such as local elimination or even global eradication are possible.
METHODS: We fit a class of non-linear, stochastic, susceptible-infectious-susceptible (SIS) models which allow positive or negative feedback, to data from a recent community-randomized trial in Ethiopia, and make predictions using model averaging.
RESULTS: The models predict that reintroduced infection may not repopulate the community, or may do so sufficiently slowly that surveillance might be effective. The preferred model exhibits positive feedback, allowing a form of stochastic hysteresis in which infection returns slowly after mass treatment, if it returns at all. Results for regions of different endemicity suggest that elimination may be more feasible than earlier models had predicted. DISCUSSION: If trachoma can be eradicated with repeated mass antibiotic distributions, it would encourage similar strategies against other bacterial diseases whose only host is humans and for which effective vaccines are not available.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21624783      PMCID: PMC3869790          DOI: 10.1016/j.epidem.2011.03.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epidemics        ISSN: 1878-0067            Impact factor:   4.396


  35 in total

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Authors:  Jenafir I House; Berhan Ayele; Travis C Porco; Zhaoxia Zhou; Kevin C Hong; Teshome Gebre; Kathryn J Ray; Jeremy D Keenan; Nicole E Stoller; John P Whitcher; Bruce D Gaynor; Paul M Emerson; Thomas M Lietman
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10.  Estimating household and community transmission of ocular Chlamydia trachomatis.

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Review 2.  Trachoma: an update on prevention, diagnosis, and treatment.

Authors:  Satasuk Joy Bhosai; Robin L Bailey; Bruce D Gaynor; Thomas M Lietman
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5.  Comparing the performance of cluster random sampling and integrated threshold mapping for targeting trachoma control, using computer simulation.

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7.  Assessment of transmission in trachoma programs over time suggests no short-term loss of immunity.

Authors:  Fengchen Liu; Travis C Porco; Kathryn J Ray; Robin L Bailey; Harran Mkocha; Beatriz Muñoz; Thomas C Quinn; Thomas M Lietman; Sheila K West
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8.  Short-term Forecasting of the Prevalence of Trachoma: Expert Opinion, Statistical Regression, versus Transmission Models.

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9.  The efficacy of oral azithromycin in clearing ocular chlamydia: mathematical modeling from a community-randomized trachoma trial.

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10.  The limits of medical interventions for the elimination of preventable blindness.

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