| Literature DB >> 26687891 |
Diana L Martin1, Ryan Wiegand1, Brook Goodhew1, Patrick Lammie1, Carolyn M Black2, Sheila West3, Charlotte A Gaydos4, Laura Dize4, Harran Mkocha5, Mabula Kasubi6, Manoj Gambhir7.
Abstract
Ocular infection with Chlamydia trachomatis can lead to trachoma, a leading infectious cause of blindness. Trachoma is targeted for elimination by 2020. Clinical grading for ocular disease is currently used for evaluating trachoma elimination programs, but serological surveillance can be a sensitive measure of disease transmission and provide a more objective testing strategy than clinical grading. We calculated the basic reproduction number from serological data in settings with high, medium, and low disease transmission based on clinical disease. The data showed a striking relationship between age seroprevalence and clinical data, demonstrating the proof-of-principle that age seroprevalence predicts transmission rates and therefore could be used as an indicator of decreased transmission of ocular trachoma.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26687891 PMCID: PMC4685243 DOI: 10.1038/srep18532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Overall prevalence of clinical signs, ocular infection, antibody-positivity, and calculated in hyperendemic, mesoendemic, and hypoendemic settings.
| Age range | %TF+ [95% CI) | %NAAT + [95% CI] | % pgp3Ab + (95% CI) | %CT694 Ab+ [95% CI] | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High | 1–6 | 47.0 [44.7–49.3] | 24·0 [17.2–30.8] | 62·0 [55.4–68.6] | 61·5 [54.9–68.1] | 29·4 [21·1–37·7] | 28·3 [19·9–36·8] |
| Medium | 1–9 | 14·5 [12.3–16.7] | 8·1 [6.4–9.8] | 3·0 [30.0–36.0] | 34·0 [31.0–37.0] | 8·1 [6·3–10·0] | 7·8 [6·0–9·6] |
| Low | 1–9 | 2·8 [1.4–4.2] | 2·0 [0.82–3.2] | 21·2 [17.7–24.6] | 18·4 [15.1–21.7] | 2·8 [2·1–3·6] | 2·8 [1·6–4·0] |
Figure 1Seroprevalence percentages by age broken down by antigen (pgp3 and CT694) and village prevalence (below 5% TF, 10-30% TF, and above 30% TF).
Seroprevalences are represented with circles scaled by the sample size and shaded regions denote 95% confidence intervals. For antigen-specific seroprevalences by age, confidence intervals use the incomplete beta function19 to account for village-level clustering (except when the seroprevalence was zero and Clopper-Pearson (1934) limit19 were used).