| Literature DB >> 29587844 |
Robert Colebunders1, Maria-Gloria Basáñez2, Katja Siling3,4, Rory J Post4,5, Anke Rotsaert1, Bruno Mmbando6, Patrick Suykerbuyk1, Adrian Hopkins7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An estimated 25 million people are currently infected with onchocerciasis (a parasitic infection caused by the filarial nematode Onchocerca volvulus and transmitted by Simulium vectors), and 99% of these are in sub-Saharan Africa. The African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control closed in December 2015 and the World Health Organization has established a new structure, the Expanded Special Project for the Elimination of Neglected Tropical Diseases for the coordination of technical support for activities focused on five neglected tropical diseases in Africa, including onchocerciasis elimination. AIMS: In this paper we argue that despite the delineation of a reasonably well-defined elimination strategy, its implementation will present particular difficulties in practice. We aim to highlight these in an attempt to ensure that they are well understood and that effective plans can be laid to solve them by the countries concerned and their international partners.Entities:
Keywords: Community drug distributors; Control; Elimination; Epilepsy; Incidence; Monitoring & evaluation; Onchocerciasis; Prevalence
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587844 PMCID: PMC5872540 DOI: 10.1186/s40249-018-0406-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Onchocerciasis-associated epilepsy (OAE), challenges and opportunities
| New findings | Challenges | Opportunities |
|---|---|---|
| Burden of disease caused by onchocerciasis is more important than previously estimated | Accurate estimation of burden of disease due to onchocerciasis, including OAE, is a pressing need | Determination of OAE prevalence and incidence provides an argument to strengthen and accelerate onchocerciasis elimination programmes by identifying areas of weakness |
| OAE awareness and advocacy are inadequate | Determination of OAE prevalence and incidence provides an argument to obtain more funding for operational research for onchocerciasis elimination efforts | |
| High prevalence/ incidence of OAE suggest ongoing onchocerciasis transmission | Strengthen epilepsy surveillance in onchocerciasis endemic regions | CDDs could be engaged in assisting with epilepsy surveillance |
| OAE is preventable | Biannual CDTI should be promoted | Message will increase the motivation of populations to take ivermectin, potentially increasing compliance |
| Misconceptions and stigma associated with epilepsy | Health promotion activities to reduce misconceptions and stigma among populations | |
| OAE is treatable | In onchocerciasis-endemic regions, a decentralised system is needed to diagnose and treat epilepsy early and appropriately | CDDs could be trained to monitor antiepileptic treatment adherence |
| Little collaboration between onchocerciasis elimination and mental health programmes | Onchocerciasis and public mental health programmes working together |
CDDs community drug distributors, CDTI community directed treatment with ivermectin, OAE onchocerciasis-associated epilepsy
Advantages and disadvantages of currently available tools for monitoring and evaluation of onchocerciasis control and elimination programmes
| Monitoring tools | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Skin snip surveys during the treatment implementation phase | Detection of skin microfilariae is the gold-standard diagnostic of active infection. PCR can be used on skin snips | Need ethical approval*; painful; require sterilisation of punches between individuals being sampled; decreasing acceptance by communities |
| Ivermectin coverage surveys | Relatively easy and affordable; can provide information about treatment uptake | May lead to overestimation of coverage and/or provide incomplete information about treatment adherence |
| Ov16 rapid diagnostic test (RDT) surveys in children aged up to 10 years | Relatively affordable, immediate answer on site | Need ethical approval*, sensitivity and specificity of RDTs not yet well established |
| Ov16 ELISA surveys in children aged up to 10 years | Sensitivity of up to 80% and specificity of up to 97% [ | Need ethical approval*; more expensive than RDTs; samples need to be sent to a lab, often located abroad. Variability in diagnostic performance according to lab and presence of other filarial infections [ |
| PCR pool screening of simuliid vectors | No ethical approval needed?*; many flies can be sampled; in principle, separate analysis of flies’ heads and bodies can provide information on infectivity to and from human populations | Lack of trained entomologists and labs, as samples often shipped to reference labs for PCR analysis; increasing number of flies needed as infection levels decrease; sampling protocols need to be refined |
*Some ministries of health have given blanket ethical approval for all monitoring and evaluation activities (including skin snips, blood tests and catching flies by human vector collectors), as part of the control programme activities. Others seem to require approval for specific instances