| Literature DB >> 29860287 |
Kat S Rock1,2, Martial L Ndeffo-Mbah3, Soledad Castaño4,5, Cody Palmer6, Abhishek Pandey3, Katherine E Atkins7,8, Joseph M Ndung'u9, T Déirdre Hollingsworth1,2,10, Alison Galvani3, Caitlin Bever6, Nakul Chitnis4,5, Matt J Keeling1,2,10.
Abstract
Background: Control of gambiense sleeping sickness relies predominantly on passive and active screening of people, followed by treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29860287 PMCID: PMC5982708 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciy018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Figure 1.Schematic of the human African trypanosomiasis transmission cycle, showing baseline medical interventions (A) and complementary interventions using currently available tools considered in this study (B) (adapted from [30]). A, Baseline interventions: passive detection of infected individuals via medical facilities (purple), and active screening (blue). Models with high- and low-risk people assume that high-risk people receive more bites from tsetse (thicker arrow) and only low-risk people are actively screened. B, Additional interventions: (1) Tsetse control (red) directly impacts all transmissions; (2) enhanced passive surveillance improves access and detection at health facilities (purple); (3) targeted active screening improves uptake of active screening campaigns and high-risk people are assumed to participate equally to low-risk people (blue). In some model variants, animals act as a sink to tsetse bites but do not contribute to transmission (dashed arrow).
Strategies Under Consideration (2018–2030)
| Interventions | Strategy Name | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline (2000–2017) | Vector Control | Enhanced Passive Surveillance | Targeted Active Screening | |
| Basic passive detection rate | Y | Y | Y | |
| Passive detection rate doubled | Y | |||
| 30% active screening | Y | Y | Y | |
| 60% active screening (with equal coverage of low- and high-risk people) | Y | |||
| Tiny targets with 60% tsetse reduction after 1 year | Y | |||
Figure 2.Results of model simulations in high-risk (A) and low-risk (B) settings for 3 strategies including either vector control (60% reduction in tsetse population), enhanced passive surveillance (double the detection rate), and targeted active screening (double the coverage, including screening high-risk groups). Percentages below boxes denote the probability of a strategy leading to elimination (<1 transmission per 1000000 population) by 2030 for each model. This figure, which displays percentages rather than absolute numbers of infections averted, takes into account the variability between models in the baseline number of new infections expected.