| Literature DB >> 23870103 |
Paul E Simonsen1, Yahya A Derua, William N Kisinza, Stephen M Magesa, Mwele N Malecela, Erling M Pedersen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Control of lymphatic filariasis (LF) in most countries of sub-Saharan Africa is based on annual mass drug administration (MDA) with a combination of ivermectin and albendazole, in order to interrupt transmission. We present findings from a detailed study on the effect of six rounds of MDA with this drug combination as implemented by the National Lymphatic Filariasis Elimination Programme (NLFEP) in a highly endemic rural area of north-eastern Tanzania.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23870103 PMCID: PMC3723586 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-13-335
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Figure 1Map of study area showing location of the three villages (Kirare, Kiomoni and Kisimatui) and ten schools. Schools: 1. Kirare, 2. Mapojoni, 3. Marungu, 4. Kiomoni, 5. Mafuriko, 6. Maweni, 7. Kange, 8. Pongwe, 9. Kigandini, and 10. Ziwani.
Timing of mass drug administration (MDA) and major village and school survey activities
| | Sep-04: Survey 1, in hamlets 1, 2, 3 and 4 (mf, clin, Og4C3, Bm14) | Sep-04: Survey 1 (ICT) |
| Oct-04: MDA1 | | |
| | Jan-06: Survey 2, in hamlets 1, 2, 3 and 4 (mf, Og4C3, Bm14) | Sep-05: Survey 2 (ICT) |
| Feb-06: MDA2 | | |
| | Jan-07: Survey 3, in hamlets 1, 2, 3 and 4 (mf, Og4C3, Bm14) | Oct-06: Survey 3 (ICT) |
| May-07: MDA3 | | |
| | Oct-07: Survey 4, in hamlets 1, 2, 3 and 4 (mf, Og4C3, Bm14) | Oct-07: Survey 4 (ICT) |
| | Oct-08: Survey 5, in hamlets 1, 2, 3 and 4 (mf, Og4C3, Bm14) | Oct-08: Survey 5 (ICT) |
| Feb-09: MDA4 | | |
| | Oct-09: Survey 6, in hamlets 1, 2, 3 and 4 (mf) | Oct-09: Survey 6 (ICT) |
| Nov-09: MDA5 | | |
| | Nov-10: Survey 7, in hamlets 1, 2, 5 and 6 (ICT, mf) | Nov-10: Survey 7 (ICT, Bm14) |
| Dec-10: MDA6 | | |
| Nov-11: Survey 8, in hamlets 1, 2, 5 and 6 (ICT, mf, Bm14) | Dec-11: Survey 8 (ICT, Bm14) |
Hamlets 1, 2, 3 and 4 were in Kirare village, hamlet 5 in Kiomoni village and hamlet 6 in Kisimatui village. Types of examinations: mf = microfilariae; clin = chronic clinical manifestations; Og4C3 = circulating filarial antigens by TropBio Og4C3 ELISA; ICT = circulating filarial antigens by ICT cards; Bm14 = antibodies to recombinant Bm14 antigen (by in-house ELISA during village surveys 1-5; by CELISA from Cellabs during surveys 7 and 8). In addition to listed activities, entomological surveillance was carried out in Kirare village continuously, and questionnaire surveys for MDA coverage was carried out in all communities and schools shortly after each MDA (the post-MDA 5 and 6 questionnaires in communities also assessed for possession of bed nets). A population census covering hamlets included in subsequent surveys was done in 2004 (before Survey 1) and 2010 (before Survey 7). Impregnated bed nets were distributed to every household in the study area in September 2011.
Overview of the LF status in Kirare, as seen in the pre-MDA survey in September 2004
| Registered population ≥ 1 yr | 1112 | 530 | - |
| Examined population ≥ 1 yr | 919 | 471 | - |
| Male : female ratio among examined | 0.88 | 0.85 | 0.76 |
| Proportion of examined below 20 yrs | 53.0% | 48.4% | 0.11 |
| Mf prevalence | 24.5% | 26.1% | 0.51 |
| Mf GMI* among all examined | 4.11 | 4.83 | - |
| Mf GMI* among mf positive | 781.3 | 851.1 | - |
| CFA prevalence# | 53.3% | 54.7% | 0.87 |
| Bm14 prevalence# | 78.9% | 78.1% | 0.91 |
| Hydrocele prevalence (in males ≥ 20 yrs)§ | 35.4% | 45.2% | 0.11 |
| Elephantiasis prevalence (in all ≥ 20 yrs)§ | 4.2% | 5.8% | 0.35 |
Shown for the complete village (Mtambuuni, Korosini, Mashine and Tundaua hamlets) and for the village section included in the later part of the study (Mtambuuni and Mashine hamlets only).
* Geometric mean intensity, in mf/ml blood.
# Based on volunteers from mosquito collection houses only (90 and 64 examined individuals from the four and two hamlets of Kirare, respectively).
§ Assessed in 175 and 104 males (hydrocele), and in 431 and 242 males and females (elephantiasis), in the four and two hamlets of Kirare, respectively.
Vector mosquito catches from the 50 collection houses in Kirare and the outcome of dissections
| Pre-MDA period (11 months)* | | | | |
| No. mosquitoes caught | 8346 | 2335 | 3385 | 2626 |
| No. mosquitoes dissected | 5396 | 1477 | 2080 | 1839 |
| No. with infection (% of dissected#) | 187 (3.47) | 56 (3.79) | 94 (4.52) | 37 (2.01) |
| No. with L3 (% of dissected§) | 77 (1.43) | 20 (1.35) | 48 (2.31) | 9 (0.49) |
| No. of L3 | 153 | 51 | 87 | 15 |
| Post-MDA period 4 (9 months)** | | | | |
| No. mosquitoes caught | 1930 | 7 | 5 | 1918 |
| No. mosquitoes dissected | 1830 | 5 | 4 | 1821 |
| No. with infection (% of dissected#) | 6 (0.33) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) | 6 (0.33) |
| No. with L3 (% of dissected§) | 1 (0.05) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) | 1 (0.05) |
| No. of L3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
| Post-MDA period 5 (13 months)*** | | | | |
| No. mosquitoes caught | 5148 | 119 | 27 | 5002 |
| No. mosquitoes dissected | 3976 | 71 | 23 | 3882 |
| No. with infection (% of dissected#) | 9 (0.23) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) | 9 (0.23) |
| No. with L3 (% of dissected§) | 4 (0.10) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) | 4 (0.10) |
| No. of L3 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 5 |
| Post-MDA period 6 (12 months)**** | | | | |
| No. mosquitoes caught | 8982 | 416 | 74 | 8492 |
| No. mosquitoes dissected | 7713 | 387 | 74 | 7252 |
| No. with infection (% of dissected#) | 2 (0.03) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) | 2 (0.03) |
| No. with L3 (% of dissected§) | 1 (0.01) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) | 1 (0.01) |
| No. of L3 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Results shown are from the pre-MDA period and post-MDA periods 4-6. Results from post-MDA periods 1-3 are given in [6].
* Nov-03 to Sep-04; ** Feb-09 to Oct-09; *** Nov-09 to Nov-10; **** Dec-10 to Nov-11.
# Infection rate.
§ Infectivity rate.
Figure 2Vector-biting and transmission in the pre-MDA period and the six post-MDA periods in Kirare. A shows mean monthly biting rate (MBR) and B shows mean monthly transmission potential (MTP).
Figure 3Seasonal variation in monthly vector-biting and transmission in Kirare (November 2003 to November 2011). A shows monthly biting rate (MBR) and B shows monthly transmission potential (MTP). Thick black line = all vector species combined; Thin green line = Anopheles gambiae; Thin red line = An. funestus; Thin blue line = Culex quinquefasciatus; Arrows indicate rounds of mass drug administration.
Figure 4Effect of six rounds of mass drug administration (MDA) on microfilaria prevalence. Brown line = all four hamlets of Kirare in survey 1-6; Green line = two hamlets of Kirare (Mtambuuni, Mashine) in survey 1-8; Red lines = one hamlet of Kiomoni (Mabavu) and one hamlet of Kisimatui (Majengo) in survey 7 and 8. In survey 1-6 all individuals ≥ 1 year were examined for mf. In survey 7 and 8 all individuals ≥ 1 year were first examined for CFA, and those positive were examined for mf. Vertical stippled lines indicate rounds of MDA.
Microfilaraemia in the study communities
| Kirare | 1 | Sep-04 | 530 | 471 (88.9) | 123 (26.1) | 4.83 | 851.1 |
| 2 | Jan-06 | 530 | 461 (87.0) | 96 (20.8) | 2.46 | 385.7 | |
| 3 | Jan-07 | 530 | 438 (82.6) | 69 (15.8) | 1.08 | 101.5 | |
| 4 | Oct-07 | 530 | 351 (66.2) | 35 (10.0) | 0.70 | 200.3 | |
| 5 | Oct-08 | 530 | 302 (57.0) | 39 (12.9) | 0.90 | 142.4 | |
| 6 | Oct-09 | 512 | 259 (53.5) | 13 (5.0) | 0.30 | 194.7 | |
| 7 | Nov-10 | 690 | 400 (58.0)# | 17§ (4.4) | 0.25¤ | 178.9 | |
| | 8 | Nov-11 | 690 | 393 (57.0)# | 11§ (2.7) | 0.15¤ | 180.8 |
| Kiomoni | 7 | Nov-10 | 504 | 386 (76.6)# | 18§ (4.7) | 0.34¤ | 423.1 |
| | 8 | Nov-11 | 504 | 312 (61.9)# | 7§ (2.2) | 0.16¤ | 487.3 |
| Kisimatui | 7 | Nov-10 | 651 | 389 (59.8)# | 34§ (8.7) | 0.55¤ | 159.1 |
| 8 | Nov-11 | 651 | 367 (56.4)# | 24§ (6.5) | 0.33¤ | 77.2 |
Results shown are for two hamlets of Kirare (Mtambuuni, Mashine) in survey 1-8, as well as for one hamlet of Kiomoni (Mabavu) and one hamlet of Kisimatui (Majengo) in survey 7 and 8. Results from all four hamlets of Kirare in survey 1-5 are given in [6].
* Geometric mean intensity, in mf/ml blood.
# Number (%) examined for CFA. In survey 7 and 8, the “number of CFA positives/number of CFA positives examined for mf/number of mf positives detected” were 101/89/15 and 77/65/9 for Kirare, 74/68/17 and 52/52/7 for Kiomoni and 110/91/28 and 84/63/18 for Kisimatui, respectively.
§ Expected number of mf positives among those examined for CFA. Calculated as [number positive for CFA] × [number positive for mf] / [number CFA positives examined for mf].
¤ Expected mf GMI among those examined for CFA. See Methods for calculation.
Figure 5Effect of six rounds of mass drug administration (MDA) on circulating filarial antigen (CFA) prevalence. Brown line = volunteers from mosquito collection houses located in all four hamlets of Kirare examined for CFA by ELISA in survey 1-5. Green line = all individuals ≥ 1 year from two hamlets of Kirare (Mtambuuni, Mashine) examined for CFA by ICT cards in survey 7 and 8. Red lines = all individuals ≥ 1 year from one hamlet of Kiomoni (Mabavu) and one hamlet of Kisimatui (Majengo) examined for CFA by ICT cards in survey 7 and 8. Vertical stippled lines indicate rounds of MDA.
Circulating filarial antigen (CFA) prevalence in the study communities
| Kirare | Nov-10 (7) | 690 | 400 (58.0) | 101 (25.3) | 0.044* |
| | Nov-11 (8) | 690 | 393 (57.0) | 77 (19.6) | |
| Kiomoni | Nov-10 (7) | 504 | 386 (76.6) | 74 (19.2) | 0.041* |
| | Nov-11 (8) | 504 | 312 (61.9) | 52 (16.7) | |
| Kisimatui | Nov-10 (7) | 651 | 389 (59.8) | 110 (28.3) | 0.001* |
| | Nov-11 (8) | 651 | 367 (56.4) | 84 (22.9) | |
| All 3 communities combined | Nov-10 (7) | 1845 | 1175 (63.7) | 285 (24.3) | < 0.001# |
| Nov-11 (8) | 1845 | 1072 (58.1) | 213 (19.9) |
Results shown are from two hamlets of Kirare (Mtambuuni, Mashine), one hamlet of Kiomoni (Mabavu) and one hamlet of Kisimatui (Majengo) in survey 7 and 8. Results from all four hamlets of Kirare in survey 1-5 are given in [6] and in Figure 3.
* McNemar’s chi-square test for paired samples (n = 318, 289, 297 and 904 for Kirare, Kiomoni, Kisimatui and all three villages combined, respectively).
# Pearsons chi-square test.
Antibodies to Bm14 in children from the study communities and the study schools
| Community surveys | Kirare | Nov-11 (8) | 178 | 120 (67.4) | 10.1 | 33 (27.5) | 0.3384 |
| | Kiomoni | Nov-11 (8) | 145 | 107 (73.8) | 9.9 | 24 (22.4) | 0.2776 |
| | Kisimatui | Nov-11 (8) | 180 | 129 (71.7) | 9.4 | 25 (19.4) | 0.2468 |
| | All 3 communities combined | Nov-11 (8) | 503 | 356 (70.8) | 9.8 | 82 (23.0) | 0.2865 |
| School surveys | All 4 schools combined | Nov-10 (7) | 453 | 362 (79.9) | 7.4 | 61 (16.9)# | 0.2776§ |
| Dec-11 (8) | 382 | 334 (87.3) | 7.2 | 38 (11.4)# | 0.2153§ |
Results shown are from children (5-14 years) from two hamlets of Kirare (Mtambuuni, Mashine), one hamlet of Kiomoni (Mabavu) and one hamlet of Kisimatui (Majengo) in community survey 8, and from Standard 1 children from four of the study schools (Kirare, Marungu, Kiomoni and Mafuriko) in survey 7 and 8. Findings from survey 1-5 in Kirare (all four hamlets) are given in [6].
* Geometric mean intensity, in OD-values.
# p = 0.039 (Pearsons chi-square test).
§ p = 0.032 (independent sample t-test on log-transformed OD-values).
Circulating filarial antigen (CFA) prevalence in Standard 1 pupils from the 10 primary schools
| Sep-04 (1) | 888 | 832 (93.7) | 399/433 (0.92) | 8.1 (6-14) | 210 (25.2) | - |
| Sep-05 (2) | 892 | 691 (77.5) | 337/354 (0.95) | 7.5 (6-14) | 163 (23.6) | 0.50 |
| Oct-06 (3) | 981 | 803 (81.9) | 406/397 (1.02) | 7.9 (6-12) | 187 (23.3) | 0.84 |
| Oct-07 (4) | 953 | 806 (84.6) | 433/373 (1.16) | 7.7 (6-16) | 101 (12.5) | < 0.001 |
| Oct-08 (5) | 971 | 848 (87.4) | 419/429 (0.98) | 7.6 (6-12) | 82 (9.7) | 0.064 |
| Oct-09 (6) | 855 | 760 (88.9) | 386/374 (1.03) | 7.6 (6-12) | 49 (6.4) | 0.018 |
| Nov-10 (7) | 966 | 831 (86.0) | 404/427 (0.95) | 7.5 (6-12) | 51 (6.1) | 0.80 |
| Dec-11 (8) | 943 | 889 (94.3) | 421/468 (0.92) | 7.5 (6-11) | 50 (5.6) | 0.65 |
Each year, the new intake of Standard 1 pupils in the 10 schools (Kiomoni, Mafuriko, Marungu, Kirare, Mapojoni, Pongwe, Kigandini, Maweni, Ziwani and Kange) was examined for CFA with ICT cards.
* For examined.
# Pearsons chi-square test.
Figure 6Effect of six rounds of mass drug administration (MDA) on circulating filarial antigen (CFA) prevalence in Standard 1 children. Thick line = prevalence for all 10 schools combined. Thin stippled lines = prevalence in school clusters according to their location to the south-west (Kirare, Mapojoni and Marungu schools; no. 1-3), north-west (Kiomoni and Mafuriko schools; no. 4-5), close west (Maweni and Kange schools; no. 6-7) and more distant west (Pongwe, Kigandini and Ziwani schools; no. 8-10) of Tanga. Vertical stippled lines indicate rounds of MDA.
Assessment of treatment coverage during mass drug administration (MDA) 1-6
| 1 | Oct-04 | 80.0 | 82.3 | 80.0 |
| 2 | Feb-06 | 95.0 | 79.0 | 68.2 |
| 3 | May-07 | 87.0 | 69.9 | 61.2 |
| 4 | Feb-09 | 96.6 | 66.8 | 32.9 |
| 5 | Nov-09 | 98.7 | 86.4 | 43.1 |
| 6 | Dec-10 | 75.0 | 67.9 | 50.3 |
* Official NLFEP coverage for eligible individuals in Tanga District, where the three study villages and ten study schools are located.
# Assessed by interviews shortly after each MDA in the study communities (975, 1009, 883, 930, 778 and 1462 individuals aged ≥ 5 years interviewed after MDA 1-6, respectively).
§ Assessed by interviews shortly after each MDA in the 10 study schools (859, 676, 776, 836, 704 and 746 Standard 1 pupils interviewed after MDA 1-6, respectively).