Turner Hugo C, Walker Martin, Churcher Thomas S, Basáñez María-Gloria
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine (St, Mary's Campus), Imperial College London, Norfolk Place, London W2 1PG, UK.
Parasit Vectors. 2014 May 26;7:241. doi: 10.1186/1756-3305-7-241.
The African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) has refocused its goals on the elimination of infection where possible, seemingly achievable by 15-17 years of annual mass distribution of ivermectin in some African foci. Previously, APOC had focused on the elimination of onchocerciasis as a public health problem. Timeframes have been set by the World Health Organization, the London Declaration on Neglected Tropical Diseases and the World Bank to achieve these goals by 2020-2025.
A novel mathematical model of the dynamics of onchocercal disease is presented which links documented associations between Onchocerca volvulus infection and the prevalence and incidence of morbidity and mortality to model outputs from our host age- and sex-structured onchocerciasis transmission framework (EpiOncho). The model is calibrated for African savannah settings, and used to assess the impact of long-term annual mass administration of ivermectin on infection and ocular and skin disease and to explore how this depends on epidemiological and programmatic variables.
Current onchocerciasis disease projections, which do not account for excess mortality of sighted individuals with heavy microfilarial loads, underestimate disease burden. Long-term annual ivermectin treatment is highly effective at reducing both the morbidity and mortality associated with onchocerciasis, and this result is not greatly influenced by treatment coverage and compliance. By contrast, impact on microfilarial prevalence and intensity is highly dependent on baseline endemicity, treatment coverage and systematic non-compliance.
The goals of eliminating morbidity and infection with ivermectin alone are distinctly influenced by epidemiological and programmatic factors. Whilst the former goal is most certainly achievable, reaching the latter will strongly depend on initial endemicity (the higher the endemicity, the greater the magnitude of inter-treatment transmission), advising caution when generalising the applicability of successful elimination outcomes to other areas. The proportion of systematic non-compliers will become far more influential in terms of overall success in achieving elimination goals.
非洲盘尾丝虫病控制计划(APOC)已将其目标重新聚焦于尽可能消除感染,在一些非洲病灶地区,通过每年大规模分发伊维菌素15至17年似乎可实现这一目标。此前,APOC专注于消除盘尾丝虫病这一公共卫生问题。世界卫生组织、《关于被忽视热带病的伦敦宣言》和世界银行已设定了到2020 - 2025年实现这些目标的时间框架。
提出了一种盘尾丝虫病动态的新型数学模型,该模型将盘尾丝虫感染与发病率和死亡率的患病率及发病率之间已记录的关联与我们基于宿主年龄和性别的盘尾丝虫病传播框架(EpiOncho)的模型输出相联系。该模型针对非洲草原环境进行了校准,并用于评估长期每年大规模施用伊维菌素对感染以及眼部和皮肤疾病的影响,并探讨这如何取决于流行病学和规划变量。
当前盘尾丝虫病预测未考虑微丝蚴负荷重的有视力个体的额外死亡率,低估了疾病负担。长期每年进行伊维菌素治疗在降低与盘尾丝虫病相关的发病率和死亡率方面非常有效,并且这一结果受治疗覆盖率和依从性的影响不大。相比之下,对微丝蚴患病率和强度的影响高度依赖于基线流行程度、治疗覆盖率和系统性不依从。
仅用伊维菌素消除发病率和感染的目标明显受到流行病学和规划因素的影响。虽然前一个目标肯定可以实现,但实现后一个目标将强烈依赖于初始流行程度(流行程度越高,治疗期间传播的规模就越大),在将成功消除结果的适用性推广到其他地区时需谨慎。就实现消除目标的总体成功而言,系统性不依从者的比例将变得更具影响力。