| Literature DB >> 25545677 |
Luc E Coffeng1, Wilma A Stolk1, Achim Hoerauf2, Dik Habbema1, Roel Bakker1, Adrian D Hopkins3, Sake J de Vlas1.
Abstract
The African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) is currently shifting its focus from morbidity control to elimination of infection. To enhance the likelihood of elimination and speed up its achievement, programs may consider to increase the frequency of ivermectin mass treatment from annual to 6-monthly or even higher. In a computer simulation study, we examined the potential impact of increasing the mass treatment frequency for different settings. With the ONCHOSIM model, we simulated 92,610 scenarios pertaining to different assumptions about transmission conditions, history of mass treatment, the future mass treatment strategy, and ivermectin efficacy. Simulation results were used to determine the minimum remaining program duration and number of treatment rounds required to achieve 99% probability of elimination. Doubling the frequency of treatment from yearly to 6-monthly or 3-monthly was predicted to reduce remaining program duration by about 40% or 60%, respectively. These reductions come at a cost of additional treatment rounds, especially in case of 3-monthly mass treatment. Also, aforementioned reductions are highly dependent on maintained coverage, and could be completely nullified if coverage of mass treatment were to fall in the future. In low coverage settings, increasing treatment coverage is almost just as effective as increasing treatment frequency. We conclude that 6-monthly mass treatment may only be worth the effort in situations where annual treatment is expected to take a long time to achieve elimination in spite of good treatment coverage, e.g. because of unfavorable transmission conditions or because mass treatment started recently.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25545677 PMCID: PMC4278850 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0115886
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Setting characteristics and treatment scenarios for simulations.
| Settings and scenarios | Possible values |
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| |
| Seasonality | Year-round transmission |
| Pre-control CMFL (community microfilarial load, the geometric mean microfilarial load in people of age 20 and above) | 5, 10, 30, 55, 80 microfilariae per skin snip, corresponding to mf prevalence levels ranging from ∼45% to ∼85%, or 9,400 to 22,200 fly bites per adult male person per year |
| Inter-individual variation in exposure to fly bites related to personal factors (e.g. attractiveness and occupation) | Low or high, specified as a gamma distribution for relative exposure to fly bites with mean value 1 and rate 3.5 (interquartile range 0.61–1.29) or 1.0 (IQR 0.29–1.39), respectively |
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| Past mass treatment frequency | Annual |
| No. of mass treatment rounds provided until present | 0, 1, 2, …, 14 |
| Coverage in past mass treatment rounds (% of total population) | Coverage low (50%), intermediate (65%), or high (80%) |
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| |
| Future mass treatment frequency | Annual, 6-monthly, or 3-monthly |
| No. of future mass treatment rounds | 0, 1, 2, …, 20, allowing estimation of the minimum number of future treatment rounds needed to achieve 99% probability of elimination |
| Coverage of future mass treatment rounds (% of total population) | Stable coverage (same as in the past), 15% lower |
For each combination of the listed factors, we estimated the probability of elimination (zero prevalence of infection) 50 years after the last mass treatment, based on 1,000 repeated simulations in ONCHOSIM.
Seasonality of fly biting rates was assumed to be proportional to the seasonal pattern observed in Asubende, Ghana [19]; the monthly biting rates (January–December) were assumed to be 104%, 91%, 58%, 75%, 75%, 66%, 102%, 133%, 117%, 128%, 146%, and 105% times the average monthly biting rate.
CMFL values of 5 and 10 mf/ss are representative for APOC regions that were mesoendemic before the start of control (pre-control mf prevalence between 40% and 60%); the higher values of CMFL are representative for hyperendemic areas (mf prevalence>60%)[10]. We did not simulate areas with lower endemicity, where the expected duration of mass treatment is shorter.
Low variation in exposure was combined with all possible values for pre-control CMFL. High variation in exposure was only combined with pre-control CMFL of 5 and 10 microfilariae per skin snip; assuming that for highly endemic areas individual variation in exposure to fly bites is not very high because of the multitude of flies (i.e. everyone is bitten very often).
Simulated mass treatment rounds were scheduled on 1st of July (annual), just prior to the annual seasonal peak in fly biting rate, or additionally on the 1st of January (6-monthly treatment) and the 1st of April and 1st of October (3-monthly treatment). If the mass treatment program was assumed to switch from annual (past) to 6-monthly or 3-monthly (future) treatment, the future mass treatment scenario was scheduled to start on the 1st of January of the next year (i.e. six months after the last ‘past’ treatment), or on the 1st of October of the same year (i.e. three months after the last ‘past’ treatment), respectively.
Hypothetically, increasing the frequency of mass treatment might induce treatment fatigue in the population, or lead people to think that it's not so bad to skip a mass treatment round as there will be another one in the near future.
Hypothetically, increasing the frequency of mass treatment might increase awareness about onchocerciasis and motivate people to participate.
Two sets of assumptions about ivermectin efficacy in ONCHOSIM.
| Assumption set 1 | Assumption set 2 | |
| Microfilaricidal effect | 100%, instantaneous upon administration. | 100%, instantaneous upon administration. |
| Macrofilaricidal effect | None. | Each treatment kills 6% of female adult worms and 12% of male adult worms. |
| Temporary halt in production of microfilariae | All female worms temporarily stop producing mf. Production recovers gradually over time in all worms, reaching maximum production capacity after 11 months on average. | Only female worms that were producing mf at the time of treatment temporarily stop producing mf. Production is resumed at full capacity after a random amount of time. |
| Permanent reduction in adult female worm capacity to produce microfilariae | Average 35% reduction per treatment, | None. |
Assumption set 1 was quantified such that ONCHOSIM could reproduce trends in skin mf levels as observed in a community trial that encompassed five consecutive annual ivermectin treatments [14], [19]. Assumption set 2 was quantified such that ONCHOSIM could reproduce trends in worm survival during three years of 3-monthly and 6-monthly mass treatment, as estimated from nodulectomy data [23], and trends in skin mf levels up to two years after a single dose of ivermectin as reported in a published meta-analysis [31]. Parameter values were fitted to the data with maximum likelihood, using the mean output of 100 repeated ONCHOSIM simulations as expected values (see for details).
Excess mortality has been reported for both female [23]–[30] and male worms [25], [26]. In the current study, excess mortality due to ivermectin was allowed to differ between male and female worms, reflecting the relative absence of male worms from subcutaneous nodules after repeated ivermectin treatment [22]–[30]. The macrofilaricidal effects of ivermectin were allowed to vary per treatment; however, this variation could not be estimated due to the aggregated nature of the Guatemalan data [23]. Instead, we arbitrarily assumed beta distributions with sample size 50 and mean 6% for males (2.5% and 97.5% percentiles 1.3%–14.0%) and 12% (3.9%–19.0%) for females, with the macrofilaricidal effects on male and female worms being perfectly correlated. Macrofilaricidal effects were assumed to be independent of earlier exposure to ivermectin and worm age, and hence reproductive capacity of the worm. In the sensitivity analysis, we set the average macrofilaricidal effects to either 4% and 8% (for males and females), or 9% and 18% (difference of factor 2/3 or 3/2) while keeping the sample size of the beta distribution at 50.
This treatment effect was assumed to vary per worm and treatment; 2.5% and 97.5% percentiles 2–24 months.
This assumption represents the notion that ivermectin causes temporary congestion of female worm uteri with dead mf, effectively preventing insemination and release of microfilariae [20], [21]. Time until recovery was assumed to vary per worm and treatment, and to follow an exponential distribution with mean 3.5 years (fitted to data [31]). This implies that 5% of adult female worms can be inseminated and release microfilariae within two months after exposure to ivermectin. Likewise, congestion resolves in 25%, 50%, 75%, and 95% of adult female worms within 1, 2.5, 5, and 10.5 years after exposure to ivermectin, respectively.
To account for variation in treatment efficacy between persons and treatments, for every simulated person and treatment, the average reduction was multiplied with a random value drawn from a Weibull distribution with mean 1 and shape 2 (see also S1 Text). In the sensitivity analysis, the average reduction was set to 23% or 52% (difference of factor 2/3 or 3/2).
Figure 1Comparison of ONCHOSIM-predicted trends in infection during 15 to 17 years of ivermectin mass treatment to previously published data.
Data are from one hyperendemic village in the River Gambia focus in Senegal where annual and 6-monthly mass treatment took place (closed circles), and three hyperendemic village in the River Bakoye focus in Mali where only annual mass treatment took place (closed diamonds, open squares and triangles) [2], [4]. ONCHOSIM predictions (black lines) are the averages of 100 repeated simulations, which were based on either of two assumption sets for ivermectin efficacy (Table 2). After about ten mass treatment rounds (1994–1995), the model predictions based on ivermectin assumption set 1 are at most somewhat pessimistic compared to the data, though discrepancies may also be due to inaccuracy of data used to populate the model (e.g. information on pre-control infection levels and/or coverage and timing of mass treatment). The seemingly large discrepancies between predictions and data after the year 2005 are due to CMFL values close to zero that had been rounded down to one decimal before logarithmic transformation.
Figure 2Example prediction for the prospect of elimination, generated by ONCHOSIM.
The graph shows expected trends for a setting with 10 past annual treatment rounds with 65% population coverage, if treatment is not continued into the future. Time 0 represents the current situation and the last treatment was given just before time 0. We assumed a pre-control community microfilarial load of about 10 mf per skin snip, which is equivalent to a crude prevalence of skin microfilariae of about 50%; low variation between individuals in relative exposure to fly bites; and ivermectin efficacy according to assumption set 1 (Table 2). Each of the 50 lines represents a single simulation of a typical rural village population in Africa (about 400 individuals). Graph line colors indicate whether a simulation contained individuals with detectable skin microfilariae 50 years after the last mass treatment (black lines, n = 9), or not (grey lines, n = 41). In this example, the probability of elimination would be estimated at 41/50 = 82%. The erratic appearance of the graph lines is due to the stochastic nature of the simulations.
Figure 3Predicted trends in probability of elimination over time for settings with different history of control.
The three panels represent predictions for different histories of control in terms of number of past treatment rounds (14 or 8) and mass treatment coverage (65% or 80%). Black lines represent the probability of elimination (y-axis) if mass treatment were to be suspended at a certain point in time (x-axis). Trends until now (time 0) are displayed against a shaded background, while expected future trends are shown against a white background. Different line types pertain to different future mass treatment frequencies (annual, 6-monthly, or 3-monthly). Red lines highlight the predicted minimum remaining program duration required to achieve 99% probability of elimination (based on 1,000 repeated simulations). The three panels are equal with respect to assumed transmission conditions (pre-control community microfilarial load of about 30 mf per skin snip, low variation between individuals in relative exposure to fly bites) and ivermectin efficacy (assumption set 1). Elimination was defined as absence of infection 50 years after suspension of mass treatment.
Figure 4Predicted minimum remaining program duration required until elimination of onchocerciasis, assuming ivermectin efficacy as in assumption set 1 and low inter-individual variation in exposure to fly bites.
Panels illustrate the minimum remaining program duration (y-axis) required for 99% probability of elimination (absence of infection 50 years after the mass last treatment), given the number of annual mass treatment rounds already completed (x-axis), as predicted by ONCHOSIM (1,000 simulations per scenario). Each panel compares four strategies: continuing annual mass treatment at same coverage (solid black line), switching to 6-monthly mass treatment at same coverage (dashed black line), switching to 3-monthly mass treatment at same coverage (dotted black line), or continuing annual treatment at increased coverage (+15 percentage points; solid blue line; only for past mass treatment coverage of 50% and 65%). Different panels pertain to increasing pre-control infection levels (top to bottom), and increasing values of past mass treatment coverage (left to right). Grey lines represent smoothed and where relevant extrapolated trendline of simulated outcomes, fitted such that they intersect with the x-axis at the same point as graph lines for annual mass treatment (black solid lines). Values in the corner of each panel represent reductions in remaining program duration (pooled over scenarios for different numbers of past treatment rounds), when increasing coverage (a), switching to 6-monthly mass treatment (b), or switching to 3-monthly mass treatment (c), compared to continuing annual treatment at the same coverage. Panels marked with an asterisk (*) pertain to simulations that did not result in 99% probability of elimination within 20 future treatment rounds, and hence contain no graph lines.
Effects of future control strategy on remaining program duration and treatment rounds until elimination.
| Mass treatment strategy | Ivermectin assumption set 1 | Ivermectin assumption set 2 | ||||
| Past coverage | Future coverage | Future frequency | Program duration | Number of treatment rounds | Program duration | Number of treatment rounds |
| 50% | 50% | 6-monthly | −41% | +18% | −34% | +32% |
| 3-monthly | −64% | +43% | −58% | +69% | ||
| 65% | annually | −37% | −37% | −32% | −32% | |
| 6-monthly | −60% | −21% | −36% | +28% | ||
| 3-monthly | −75% | 0% | −77% | −7% | ||
| 65% | 50% | 6-monthly | −14% | +72% | −3% | +95% |
| 3-monthly | −46% | +118% | −32% | +151% | ||
| 65% | 6-monthly | −40% | +21% | −29% | +42% | |
| 3-monthly | −62% | +51% | −52% | +92% | ||
| 80% | annually | −23% | −23% | −17% | −17% | |
| 6-monthly | −48% | +4% | −12% | +76% | ||
| 3-monthly | −69% | +26% | −69% | +23% | ||
| 80% | 65% | 6-monthly | −25% | +50% | −15% | +69% |
| 3-monthly | −52% | +91% | −46% | +118% | ||
| 80% | 6-monthly | −35% | +31% | −26% | +48% | |
| 3-monthly | −59% | +66% | −49% | +103% | ||
All differences are defined compared to the strategy of continuing annual treatment strategy at maintained treatment coverage, and are based on the assumptions of low variation in exposure to fly bites. Estimates are pooled over all combinations of number of past treatment rounds and pre-control community microfilarial load (see Figs. 4, S3, S4, and S5 for more detailed estimates of reduction in program duration by pre-control community microfilarial load).
* Estimates were similar for different assumptions about pre-control levels of infection and number of past treatment rounds.
** When future mass treatment coverage was assumed to drop, the reduction in program duration tended to be smaller for settings with fewer past treatment rounds and higher pre-control infection levels (and vice versa). Analogously, when future mass treatment coverage was assumed to drop, the increase in remaining number of mass treatment rounds tended to be higher for settings with fewer past treatment rounds and higher pre-control infection levels (and vice versa).
Sensitivity analysis for assumptions about density dependence in transmission and permanent effects of ivermectin on adult worms.
| Assumption set regarding ivermectin efficacy | Number of past treatment rounds at 65% coverage | Analysis | Minimum number of treatments and program duration required to achieve 99% probability of elimination, given future mass treatment strategy | |||
| Annual treatment at 65% coverage | 6-monthly treatment at 65% coverage | Annual treatment at 80% coverage | ||||
| Number of treatment rounds | Program duration | |||||
| 1 | 0 | Main analysis | 18 | >20 | >10 | 15 (−17%) |
| Lower density dependence | 13 | 17 (+31%) | 8.5 (−35%) | 10 (−23%) | ||
| Smaller reduction in worm fertility | >20 | >20 | >10 | 18 | ||
| Larger reduction in worm fertility | 15 | >20 | >10 | 12 (−20%) | ||
| 6 | Main analysis | 12 | 15 (+25%) | 7.5 (−38%) | 9 (−25%) | |
| Lower density dependence | 7 | 9 (+29%) | 4.5 (−36%) | 6 (−14%) | ||
| Smaller reduction in worm fertility | 17 | 19 (+12%) | 9.5 (−44%) | 12 (−29%) | ||
| Larger reduction in worm fertility | 9 | 13 (+44%) | 6.5 (−28%) | 7 (−22%) | ||
| 2 | 0 | Main analysis | 18 | >20 | >10 | 15 (−17%) |
| Lower density dependence | 13 | 19 (+46%) | 9.5 (−27%) | 11 (−15%) | ||
| Smaller macrofilaricidal effects | 20 | >20 | >10 | 16 (−20%) | ||
| Larger macrofilaricidal effects | 17 | >20 | >10 | 13 (−24%) | ||
| 6 | Main analysis | 12 | 16 (+33%) | 8 (−33%) | 10 (−17%) | |
| Lower density dependence | 7 | 10 (+43%) | 5 (−29%) | 6 (−14%) | ||
| Smaller macrofilaricidal effects | 14 | 18 (+29%) | 9 (−36%) | 11 (−21%) | ||
| Larger macrofilaricidal effects | 11 | 14 (+27%) | 7 (−36%) | 9 (−18%) | ||
The results presented here are based on a setting where the pre-control community microfilarial load is 30 microfilariae per skin snip.
* Numbers in parentheses represent differences relative to the strategy of continuing mass treatment annually at 65% coverage.
** The probability of elimination was less than 99% within the scope of the simulations (maximum 20 future treatment rounds).
*** Permanent effects of ivermectin on adult worms were assumed to be either a factor 2/3 lower or a factor 3/2 higher (see Table 2 for details).