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Acceptability of test and treat with doxycycline against Onchocerciasis in an area of persistent transmission in Massangam Health District, Cameroon

The main onchocerciasis elimination strategy is annual Community-Directed Treatment with ivermectin (CDTi). However, as a response to persistent high infection prevalence in Massangam Health District in Cameroon, two rounds of alternative treatments including biannual CDTi, ground larviciding and te...

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Autores principales: Nditanchou, Rogers, Dixon, Ruth, Atekem, Kareen, Akongo, Serge, Biholong, Benjamin, Ayisi, Franklin, Nwane, Philippe, Wilhelm, Aude, Basnet, Sapana, Selby, Richard, Wanji, Samuel, Bakajika, Didier, Oye, Joseph, Kamgno, Joseph, Boakye, Daniel, Schmidt, Elena, Senyonjo, Laura
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10075443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37018235
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011185
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author Nditanchou, Rogers
Dixon, Ruth
Atekem, Kareen
Akongo, Serge
Biholong, Benjamin
Ayisi, Franklin
Nwane, Philippe
Wilhelm, Aude
Basnet, Sapana
Selby, Richard
Wanji, Samuel
Bakajika, Didier
Oye, Joseph
Kamgno, Joseph
Boakye, Daniel
Schmidt, Elena
Senyonjo, Laura
author_facet Nditanchou, Rogers
Dixon, Ruth
Atekem, Kareen
Akongo, Serge
Biholong, Benjamin
Ayisi, Franklin
Nwane, Philippe
Wilhelm, Aude
Basnet, Sapana
Selby, Richard
Wanji, Samuel
Bakajika, Didier
Oye, Joseph
Kamgno, Joseph
Boakye, Daniel
Schmidt, Elena
Senyonjo, Laura
author_sort Nditanchou, Rogers
collection PubMed
description The main onchocerciasis elimination strategy is annual Community-Directed Treatment with ivermectin (CDTi). However, as a response to persistent high infection prevalence in Massangam Health District in Cameroon, two rounds of alternative treatments including biannual CDTi, ground larviciding and test and treat with doxycycline (TTd) were implemented. This led to a significant prevalence reduction from 35.7% to 12.3% (p<0.001) as reported by Atekem and colleagues. Here we report on the acceptability of TTd component based on qualitative and quantitative data. The TTd involved microscopic examination for microfilaria in skin biopsy and those infected were offered doxycycline 100 mg daily for 35 days by community-directed distributors (CDDs). Participation level was significantly high with 54% of eligible population (age > 8, not pregnant, not breastfeeding, not severely ill,) participating in the test in each round, increasing to 83% over the two rounds. Factors associated with non-participation included mistrust, being female; being younger than 26 years; short stay in the community; and belonging to semi-nomadic sub population due to their remote and disperse settlement, discrimination, their non selection as CDD, and language and cultural barriers. Treatment coverage was high -71% in round 1 and 83% in round 2. People moving away between testing and treatment impacted treatment coverage. Some participants noted mismatch between symptoms and test result; and that ivermectin is better than doxycycline, while others favoured doxycycline. CDD worried about work burden with unmatching compensation. Overall, TTd participation was satisfactory. But can be improved through reinforcing sensitisation, reducing time between test and treatment; combining TTd and CDTi in one outing; augmenting CDDs compensation and/or weekly visit; exploring for frequently excluded populations and adapting strategies to reach them; and use of a sensitive less invasive test.
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spelling pubmed-100754432023-04-06 Acceptability of test and treat with doxycycline against Onchocerciasis in an area of persistent transmission in Massangam Health District, Cameroon Nditanchou, Rogers Dixon, Ruth Atekem, Kareen Akongo, Serge Biholong, Benjamin Ayisi, Franklin Nwane, Philippe Wilhelm, Aude Basnet, Sapana Selby, Richard Wanji, Samuel Bakajika, Didier Oye, Joseph Kamgno, Joseph Boakye, Daniel Schmidt, Elena Senyonjo, Laura PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article The main onchocerciasis elimination strategy is annual Community-Directed Treatment with ivermectin (CDTi). However, as a response to persistent high infection prevalence in Massangam Health District in Cameroon, two rounds of alternative treatments including biannual CDTi, ground larviciding and test and treat with doxycycline (TTd) were implemented. This led to a significant prevalence reduction from 35.7% to 12.3% (p<0.001) as reported by Atekem and colleagues. Here we report on the acceptability of TTd component based on qualitative and quantitative data. The TTd involved microscopic examination for microfilaria in skin biopsy and those infected were offered doxycycline 100 mg daily for 35 days by community-directed distributors (CDDs). Participation level was significantly high with 54% of eligible population (age > 8, not pregnant, not breastfeeding, not severely ill,) participating in the test in each round, increasing to 83% over the two rounds. Factors associated with non-participation included mistrust, being female; being younger than 26 years; short stay in the community; and belonging to semi-nomadic sub population due to their remote and disperse settlement, discrimination, their non selection as CDD, and language and cultural barriers. Treatment coverage was high -71% in round 1 and 83% in round 2. People moving away between testing and treatment impacted treatment coverage. Some participants noted mismatch between symptoms and test result; and that ivermectin is better than doxycycline, while others favoured doxycycline. CDD worried about work burden with unmatching compensation. Overall, TTd participation was satisfactory. But can be improved through reinforcing sensitisation, reducing time between test and treatment; combining TTd and CDTi in one outing; augmenting CDDs compensation and/or weekly visit; exploring for frequently excluded populations and adapting strategies to reach them; and use of a sensitive less invasive test. Public Library of Science 2023-04-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10075443/ /pubmed/37018235 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011185 Text en © 2023 Nditanchou et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nditanchou, Rogers
Dixon, Ruth
Atekem, Kareen
Akongo, Serge
Biholong, Benjamin
Ayisi, Franklin
Nwane, Philippe
Wilhelm, Aude
Basnet, Sapana
Selby, Richard
Wanji, Samuel
Bakajika, Didier
Oye, Joseph
Kamgno, Joseph
Boakye, Daniel
Schmidt, Elena
Senyonjo, Laura
Acceptability of test and treat with doxycycline against Onchocerciasis in an area of persistent transmission in Massangam Health District, Cameroon
title Acceptability of test and treat with doxycycline against Onchocerciasis in an area of persistent transmission in Massangam Health District, Cameroon
title_full Acceptability of test and treat with doxycycline against Onchocerciasis in an area of persistent transmission in Massangam Health District, Cameroon
title_fullStr Acceptability of test and treat with doxycycline against Onchocerciasis in an area of persistent transmission in Massangam Health District, Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Acceptability of test and treat with doxycycline against Onchocerciasis in an area of persistent transmission in Massangam Health District, Cameroon
title_short Acceptability of test and treat with doxycycline against Onchocerciasis in an area of persistent transmission in Massangam Health District, Cameroon
title_sort acceptability of test and treat with doxycycline against onchocerciasis in an area of persistent transmission in massangam health district, cameroon
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10075443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37018235
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0011185
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