| Literature DB >> 28056015 |
Peter U Fischer1, Christopher L King2, Julie A Jacobson3, Gary J Weil1.
Abstract
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28056015 PMCID: PMC5215784 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Selected studies that report adverse events of onchocerciasis patients after treatment with DEC compared with a potential study design of IDA.
| Location/Type of the study | Participant characteristics | DEC dosing | Adverse events in DEC group | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liberia/randomized clinical trial (RCT) oral/topical | Ten men; mean Mf 7 Mf/mg skin; no obvious eye disease | 1,100 mg over eight days, ~5,450 mg over six months, total about 109 mg/kg | Initial Mazzotti | [ |
| Southern Sudan/observational | 18 men; >50 Mf/mg; no acute eye disease, but ocular Mf | 925 mg over eight days, total ~15 mg/kg | Mazzotti reaction in all patients; new ocular lesions (some transient, some sustained) in most patients starting two days after beginning of treatment, no assessment after treatment | [ |
| Liberia/randomized observational | Ten men; low to moderate skin Mf | 1,100 mg over eight days, ~5,450 mg over six months, total about 109 mg/kg | Initial Mazzotti reaction; Anterior uveitis in most patients, some patients with chorioretinitis, optic nerve pallor, visual field constriction, adverse events associated with circulating immune complexes, no follow-up after conclusion of treatment | [ |
| Northern Ghana/observational | 21 men; varying skin Mf density, no eye assessments | 200 mg/day for seven days, total ~23 mg/kg | Mazzotti reaction, severe pruritus, lymphadenopathy, and hypotension related to Mf density | [ |
| Mali/placebo-controlled RCT with ivermectin arm | Ten men; ~100 Mf/mg; 70% punctate keratitis, 50% Mf in the anterior chamber | 1,300 mg over eight days, total ~22 mg/kg | 50% with mild to moderate Mazzotti reaction, 50% with severe Mazzotti; ocular findings unchanged, only one patient with new ocular lesions at six months | [ |
| Liberia/placebo-controlled RCT with ivermectin arm | Ten men; ~ 40 mf/mg; 90% with eye disease and/or ocular Mf | 1,300 mg over eight days, total ~22 mg/kg | Mazzotti reaction, adverse reaction score twice as high as in ivermectin group; increased punctate opacities starting four days after beginning of treatment, ocular changes resolved by six months after treatment | [ |
| Northern Ghana/ controlled RCT with ivermectin versus placebo | 17 men; moderate to heavy | 1,300 mg over eight days, total ~22 mg/kg | Mazzotti reaction; increased punctate corneal opacities starting four days after begin of treatment that were resolved by six months | [ |
| Proposed RCTs with IDA versus ivermectin | Ivermectin pretreatment 3 months before IDA. For those with zero Mf in the skin or eye three months later, randomize to treat with IDA or with ivermectin alone at time zero months. | Single IDA treatment contains DEC (6 mg/kg) | Follow-up skin Mf at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months. Adult worms assessed by nodulectomy at 24 months |
*Mazzotti reactions may include fever, pruritus, skin rash, headache, arthralgia, and painful lymphadenopathy.
Fig 1Clinical signs of onchocerciasis (A) and lymphatic filariasis (B) in the same individual living in an area coendemic for both infections in Lofa County, Liberia. A Hypopigmented skin (“leopard skin”) on the shins. B Advanced hydrocele.