Department of Disease Control, Faculty of Infectious & Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
London Centre for Neglected Tropical Disease Research, Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine (St Mary's campus), Imperial College London, London, UK.
Parasit Vectors. 2018 Jan 31;11(1):70. doi: 10.1186/s13071-018-2655-5.
Onchocerciasis and lymphatic filariasis (LF) are major filarial infections targeted for elimination in most endemic sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) countries by 2020/2025. The current control strategies are built upon community-directed mass administration of ivermectin (CDTI) for onchocerciasis, and ivermectin plus albendazole for LF, with evidence pointing towards the potential for novel drug regimens. When distributing microfilaricides however, considerable care is needed to minimise the risk of severe adverse events (SAEs) in areas that are co-endemic for onchocerciasis or LF and loiasis. This work aims to combine previously published predictive risk maps for onchocerciasis, LF and loiasis to (i) explore the scale of spatial heterogeneity in co-distributions, (ii) delineate target populations for different treatment strategies, and (iii) quantify populations at risk of SAEs across the continent.
Geographical co-endemicity of filarial infections prior to the implementation of large-scale mass treatment interventions was analysed by combining a contemporary LF endemicity map with predictive prevalence maps of onchocerciasis and loiasis. Potential treatment strategies were geographically delineated according to the level of co-endemicity and estimated transmission intensity.
In total, an estimated 251 million people live in areas of LF and/or onchocerciasis transmission in SSA, based on 2015 population estimates. Of these, 96 million live in areas co-endemic for both LF and onchocerciasis, providing opportunities for integrated control programmes, and 83 million live in LF-monoendemic areas potentially targetable for the novel ivermectin-diethylcarbamazine-albendazole (IDA) triple therapy. Only 4% of the at-risk population live in areas co-endemic with high loiasis transmission, representing up to 1.2 million individuals at high risk of experiencing SAEs if treated with ivermectin. In these areas, alternative treatment strategies should be explored, including biannual albendazole monotherapy for LF (1.4 million individuals) and 'test-and-treat' strategies (8.7 million individuals) for onchocerciasis.
These maps are intended to initiate discussion around the potential for tailored treatment strategies, and highlight populations at risk of SAEs. Further work is required to test and refine strategies in programmatic settings, providing the empirical evidence needed to guide efforts towards the 2020/2025 goals and beyond.
盘尾丝虫病和淋巴丝虫病(LF)是在撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)大多数流行地区被确定在 2020/2025 年消除的主要丝虫病感染。目前的控制策略是建立在针对盘尾丝虫病的社区定向大规模伊维菌素治疗(CDTI)以及针对 LF 的伊维菌素加阿苯达唑之上,有证据表明可能需要新的药物方案。然而,在分发微丝蚴药物时,需要特别注意,以尽量减少在盘尾丝虫病或 LF 和罗阿丝虫病流行地区发生严重不良事件(SAE)的风险。这项工作旨在结合以前发表的盘尾丝虫病、LF 和罗阿丝虫病的预测风险图,(i)探索共同分布的空间异质性的规模,(ii)划定不同治疗策略的目标人群,以及(iii)量化整个大陆面临 SAE 风险的人群。
通过结合当代 LF 流行地图和盘尾丝虫病和罗阿丝虫病的预测流行地图,分析在大规模大规模治疗干预之前的丝状感染的地理共同流行情况。根据共同流行程度和估计的传播强度,对潜在的治疗策略进行了地理划定。
根据 2015 年人口估计,估计共有 2.51 亿人生活在 SSA 的 LF 和/或盘尾丝虫病传播地区。其中,9600 万人生活在 LF 和盘尾丝虫病共同流行的地区,为综合控制计划提供了机会,8300 万人生活在 LF 单流行地区,可能是新的伊维菌素-二乙基卡巴嗪-阿苯达唑(IDA)三联疗法的目标。只有 4%的高危人群生活在与高罗阿丝虫病传播共同流行的地区,这代表着如果用伊维菌素治疗,有多达 120 万人面临严重不良事件的高风险。在这些地区,应探讨替代治疗策略,包括 LF 的双年度阿苯达唑单药治疗(140 万人)和盘尾丝虫病的“检测和治疗”策略(870 万人)。
这些地图旨在启动关于定制治疗策略的潜力的讨论,并突出面临严重不良事件风险的人群。需要进一步的工作来在规划环境中测试和完善这些策略,提供指导实现 2020/2025 年目标及以后目标所需的经验证据。