1Wolfson Wellcome Biomedical Laboratories, Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom.
2Public Health Laboratory - Ivo de Carneri, Pemba, United Republic of Tanzania.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2020 Jul;103(1_Suppl):66-79. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.19-0831.
The Schistosomiasis Consortium for Operational Research and Evaluation (SCORE) was created in 2008 to answer questions of importance to program managers working to reduce the burden of schistosomiasis in Africa. In the past, intermediate host snail monitoring and control was an important part of integrated schistosomiasis control. However, in Africa, efforts to control snails have declined dramatically over the last 30 years. A resurgence of interest in the control of snails has been prompted by the realization, backed by a World Health Assembly resolution (WHA65.21), that mass drug administration alone may be insufficient to achieve schistosomiasis elimination. SCORE has supported work on snail identification and mapping and investigated how xenomonitoring techniques can aid in the identification of infected snails and thereby identify potential transmission areas. Focal mollusciciding with niclosamide was undertaken in Zanzibar and Côte d'Ivoire as a part of elimination studies. Two studies involving biological control of snails were conducted: one explored the association of freshwater riverine prawns and snail hosts in Côte d'Ivoire and the other assessed the current distribution of , the invasive Louisiana red swamp crayfish, in Kenya and its association with snail hosts and schistosomiasis transmission. SCORE also supported modeling studies on the importance of snail control in achieving elimination and a meta-analysis of the impact of molluscicide-based snail control programs on human schistosomiasis prevalence and incidence. SCORE's snail control studies contributed to increased investment in building capacity, and specimens collected during SCORE research deposited in the Schistosomiasis Collections at the Natural History Museum (SCAN) will provide a valuable resource for the years to come.
血吸虫病合作研究与评价组织(SCORE)成立于 2008 年,旨在回答致力于减轻非洲血吸虫病负担的项目管理人员所关心的问题。过去,中间宿主钉螺监测和控制是综合血吸虫病控制的重要组成部分。然而,在过去的 30 年里,非洲控制钉螺的努力大幅减少。世界卫生大会决议(WHA65.21)的支持下,人们意识到单纯大规模药物治疗可能不足以实现血吸虫病消除,因此重新引起了对控制钉螺的兴趣。SCORE 支持钉螺鉴定和绘图工作,并研究了外来监测技术如何有助于识别受感染的钉螺,从而确定潜在的传播区域。赞比亚和科特迪瓦作为消除研究的一部分,进行了焦点螺类化学杀灭。开展了两项涉及螺类生物控制的研究:一项研究探讨了科特迪瓦淡水河流虾与钉螺宿主之间的关联,另一项研究评估了入侵的路易斯安那红沼泽小龙虾在肯尼亚的当前分布及其与钉螺宿主和血吸虫病传播的关联。SCORE 还支持关于在实现消除方面控制钉螺的重要性的建模研究,以及对基于杀螺剂的螺类控制项目对人类血吸虫病流行率和发病率影响的荟萃分析。SCORE 的螺类控制研究有助于增加能力建设方面的投资,SCORE 研究过程中收集的标本存放在自然历史博物馆的血吸虫病收藏处(SCAN),这将为未来提供宝贵的资源。