| Literature DB >> 34590062 |
Vito Colella1, Virak Khieu2, Andrew Worsley3, Dammika Senevirathna1, Sinuon Muth2, Rekol Huy2, Peter Odermatt4,5, Rebecca J Traub1.
Abstract
Background: Hookworm disease is endemic throughout many parts of the Asia Pacific, despite targeted control programs of at-risk populations. The success of these programs has been hindered by the limited efficacy of widely-used mebendazole, rapid re-infection rates linked to persistent reservoirs of untreated people and dogs, and the low sensitivity of conventional coprodiagnostic techniques employed.Entities:
Keywords: Albendazole; Ancylostoma ceylanicum; Control programs; Soil transmitted helminths; Zoonosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34590062 PMCID: PMC8403762 DOI: 10.1016/j.lanwpc.2021.100258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Reg Health West Pac ISSN: 2666-6065
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study design.
Characteristics of 1,232 study participants from villages of Rovieng district, Preah Vihear province, northeastern Cambodia.
| Variable | Category | n (%) |
| Age | ||
| 6-11 | 299 (24·3) | |
| 12-17 | 207 (16·8) | |
| 18-64 | 619 (50·2) | |
| 65+ | 107 (8·7) | |
| Sex | ||
| Male | 525 (42·6) | |
| Female | 707 (57·4) | |
| Occupation | ||
| Farmer | 642 (52·1) | |
| Student | 474 (38·5) | |
| Teacher | 16 (1·3) | |
| Other | 100 (8·1) | |
| Education | ||
| None | 112 (9·1) | |
| Primary | 868 (70·5) | |
| Secondary | 171 (13·9) | |
| High School | 79 (6·4) | |
| University | 2 (0·2) | |
| Dogs or cats in the house | ||
| Yes | 1053 (85·5) | |
| No | 179 (14·5) | |
| Frequency of visiting rice fields | ||
| Never | 229 (18·6) | |
| Rarely | 23 (1·9) | |
| Sometimes | 250 (20·3) | |
| Often | 730 (59·3) | |
| Dog to the rice field | ||
| Never | 614 (49·8) | |
| Rarely | 24 (1·9) | |
| Sometimes | 388 (31·5) | |
| Often | 206 (16·7) | |
| Main water source | ||
| Lake | 27 (2·2) | |
| Well | 1205 (97·8) | |
| Main source of drinking water | ||
| Lake | 637 (51·7) | |
| Well | 509 (41·3) | |
| Pure | 83 (6·7) | |
| No answer given | 3 (0·2) | |
| Boiling water during the wet/rainy season | ||
| No | 883 (71·7) | |
| Yes | 349 (28·3) | |
| Drinking water in the dry season | ||
| Well | 1137 (92·3) | |
| Pure | 81 (6·6) | |
| Lake | 13 (1·1) | |
| No answer given | 1 (0·1) | |
| Boiling water during the dry season | ||
| No | 838 (68·0) | |
| Yes | 393 (31·9) | |
| No answer given | 1 (0·1) | |
| Frequency of using shoes | ||
| Sometimes | 13 (1·1) | |
| Often | 1204 (97·7) | |
| Always | 14 (1·1) | |
| No answer given | 1 (0·1) | |
| Treated with any anthelminthic drugs in the last two months | ||
| No | 737 (59·8) | |
| Yes | 495 (40·2) | |
| Toilet at home | ||
| No | 439 (35·6) | |
| Yes | 793 (64·4) | |
| Place used to defecate | ||
| Toilet | 803 (65·2) | |
| Rice field | 78 (6·3) | |
| Forest | 169 (13·7) | |
| Other | 182 (14·8) |
Number and percentages of people diagnosed with hookworm infection by microscopy in villages of Rovieng district, Preah Vihear province, northeastern Cambodia stratified per age classes and sex.
| Variable | Category | n (%) |
| Age | ||
| 6-11 | 33 (11·0) | |
| 12-17 | 27 (13·0) | |
| 18-64 | 86 (13·9) | |
| 65+ | 20 (18·7) | |
| Sex | ||
| Male | *96 (18·3) | |
| Female | 70 (9·9) |
*p<0·0001
Coefficient estimates of community-adjusted effects for hookworm infection at baseline in 1,232 study participants and cure rates in infected people from villages of Rovieng district, northeastern Cambodia.
| Baseline | Coefficient Estimate (95% CI) | |
| Intercept | -1·777 (-2·315, -1·304) | <0·0001 |
| Age (years) | 0·006 (-0·006, 0·017) | 0·3195 |
| Sex (Female) | -1·368 (-2·074, -0·691) | <0·0001 |
| Boiling water during wet season | -0·426 (-0·902, 0·031) | 0·0713 |
| Age (years) x Sex (Female) | 0·017 (0·001, 0·034) | 0·0394 |
| Cure rates | ||
| Intercept | 0·265 (-0·518, 1·034) | 0·484 |
| Age (years) | -0·020 (-0·038, -0·004) | 0·020 |
| Boiling water during wet season | 0·949 (0·026, 1·919) | 0·047 |
Figure 2Community-based prevalence to any hookworm, Ancylostoma ceylanicum, and Necator americanus as calculated by mqPCR in Anglong Svay (AS), Chamlong, Bos Pey (BP), Chamlong (CL), Chambak Pa'em (CP), Kampot (KP), Or (OR), Pal Hal (PH), Rovieng Tboung (RT), Sra'er Thom (ST), and Sangker Roung (SR) villages.
Figure 3Age distribution of individuals based on the infection status at baseline (A) and on the outcome of being cured (B) from any hookworm infection.
Cure rates and egg reduction rates for total hookworms, Necator americanus, Ancylostoma ceylanicum and Ancylostoma duodenale by microscopy and qPCR.
| Hookworms (n=151) | ||||
| Microscopy CR (%) | 81·5% (95% CI: 74·3-87·3) | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| ERR Microscopy GM ERR Microscopy AM | 95·8% (95% CI: 92·8-98·3) 40·8% (95% CI: -21·5-84·6) | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| qPCR CR (%) | 46·4% (95% CI: 38·2-54·6) | 48·3% (95% CI: 39·8-56·8) | 52·6% (95% CI: 28·9-75·6) | 0% |
| qPCR GM ERR qPCR AM ERR | 83·2 (95% CI: 77·1-88·1) | 84·5% (95% CI: 78·6-89·8) | 98·7% (95% CI: 96·9-99·8) | n/a |
n/a not applicable
qPCR-based cure rates for Necator americanus and Ancylostoma ceylanicum stratified for sex, age groups and single or mixed infections.
| N | Cure rates (%) (95% CI) | X | P-value | N | Cure rates (%) (95% CI) | P-value (Fisher's Exact Test) | ||
| Overall | 143 | 19 | ||||||
| Sex | ||||||||
| Male | 87 | 50·6 (39·6-61·5) | 0·272 | 0·602 | 5 | 60 (14·7-94·7) | 1 | |
| Female | 56 | 44·6 (31·3-58·5) | 14 | 50·0 (23-77) | ||||
| Age | ||||||||
| 6–11 | 30 | 53·3 (34·3-71·7) | 3·566 | 0·312 | 3 | 66·7 (9·4-99·2) | 0·657 | |
| 12–17 | 21 | 52·4 (29·8-74·3) | 2 | 0 (0-84·1) | ||||
| 18–64 | 74 | 50·0 (38·1-61·9) | 12 | 58·3 (27·7-84·8) | ||||
| >65 | 18 | 27·8 (9·7- 53·5) | 2 | 50·0 (1·3-98·7) | ||||
| Infection | ||||||||
| Single | 131 | 49·6 (40·8-58·5) | 0·606 | 0·436 | 8 | 37·5 (8·5-75·5) | 0·370 | |
| Mixed | 12 | 33·3 (9·9-65·1) | 11 | 63·6 (30·9-89·1) |
Figure 4Scatterplot of eggs per gram (EPG) inferred via mqPCR for hookworms at the baseline and after a single treatment with albendazole.
Figure 5Smoothed age-prevalence at baseline and cure rate-age curves.