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Performance and Safety of Praziquantel for Treatment of Intestinal Schistosomiasis in Infants and Preschool Children

BACKGROUND: In 2012 the WHO formally recognised that infants and preschool children are at significant risk of schistosomiasis and qualify for treatment with praziquantel (PZQ). Targeted surveys determining both the performance and safety of this drug are now needed in endemic areas. We have formall...

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Autores principales: Sousa-Figueiredo, José C., Betson, Martha, Atuhaire, Aaron, Arinaitwe, Moses, Navaratnam, Annalan M. D., Kabatereine, Narcis B., Bickle, Quentin, Stothard, J. Russell
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3475660/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23094120
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001864
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author Sousa-Figueiredo, José C.
Betson, Martha
Atuhaire, Aaron
Arinaitwe, Moses
Navaratnam, Annalan M. D.
Kabatereine, Narcis B.
Bickle, Quentin
Stothard, J. Russell
author_facet Sousa-Figueiredo, José C.
Betson, Martha
Atuhaire, Aaron
Arinaitwe, Moses
Navaratnam, Annalan M. D.
Kabatereine, Narcis B.
Bickle, Quentin
Stothard, J. Russell
author_sort Sousa-Figueiredo, José C.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In 2012 the WHO formally recognised that infants and preschool children are at significant risk of schistosomiasis and qualify for treatment with praziquantel (PZQ). Targeted surveys determining both the performance and safety of this drug are now needed in endemic areas. We have formally assessed parasitological cure and putative side-effects in a prospective cohort of Schistosoma mansoni-infected children (aged 5 months–7 years old) in lakeshore settings of Uganda. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: From a total of 369 children found to be egg-patent for intestinal schistosomiasis, 305 were followed-up three to four weeks after PZQ treatment and infection status re-assessed. Separately, a previously tested side-effect questionnaire was employed before and 24 hours after PZQ treatment to assess incidence and amelioration of symptoms in young children and their mothers. While the overall observed parasitological cure was 56.4%, a significant difference was found between a sub-set of children who had a history of multiple PZQ treatments (between one and four in an 18 month period), where cure rate was 41.7%, and those who had never received treatment (cure rate was 77·6%). PZQ proved to be safe, with only mild reported side effects which cleared within a month after treatment. Prevalence of reported symptoms was significantly lower in children than in mothers, and fewer side-effects were reported upon subsequent rounds of PZQ treatment. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Our findings show that PZQ treatment of young children resulted in satisfactory cure rates, and marked reduction in egg-output, with only mild and transient reported side-effects. However, the cure rate is clearly lower in younger children and those with history of previous treatment. Cure rate, but not egg reduction rate, was also lower in children with heavier pre-intervention infection intensity. With chemotherapy now recommended as a long-term strategy for disease control in young children, research into optimising the periodicity of targeted treatment strategies is now crucial.
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spelling pubmed-34756602012-10-23 Performance and Safety of Praziquantel for Treatment of Intestinal Schistosomiasis in Infants and Preschool Children Sousa-Figueiredo, José C. Betson, Martha Atuhaire, Aaron Arinaitwe, Moses Navaratnam, Annalan M. D. Kabatereine, Narcis B. Bickle, Quentin Stothard, J. Russell PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: In 2012 the WHO formally recognised that infants and preschool children are at significant risk of schistosomiasis and qualify for treatment with praziquantel (PZQ). Targeted surveys determining both the performance and safety of this drug are now needed in endemic areas. We have formally assessed parasitological cure and putative side-effects in a prospective cohort of Schistosoma mansoni-infected children (aged 5 months–7 years old) in lakeshore settings of Uganda. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: From a total of 369 children found to be egg-patent for intestinal schistosomiasis, 305 were followed-up three to four weeks after PZQ treatment and infection status re-assessed. Separately, a previously tested side-effect questionnaire was employed before and 24 hours after PZQ treatment to assess incidence and amelioration of symptoms in young children and their mothers. While the overall observed parasitological cure was 56.4%, a significant difference was found between a sub-set of children who had a history of multiple PZQ treatments (between one and four in an 18 month period), where cure rate was 41.7%, and those who had never received treatment (cure rate was 77·6%). PZQ proved to be safe, with only mild reported side effects which cleared within a month after treatment. Prevalence of reported symptoms was significantly lower in children than in mothers, and fewer side-effects were reported upon subsequent rounds of PZQ treatment. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Our findings show that PZQ treatment of young children resulted in satisfactory cure rates, and marked reduction in egg-output, with only mild and transient reported side-effects. However, the cure rate is clearly lower in younger children and those with history of previous treatment. Cure rate, but not egg reduction rate, was also lower in children with heavier pre-intervention infection intensity. With chemotherapy now recommended as a long-term strategy for disease control in young children, research into optimising the periodicity of targeted treatment strategies is now crucial. Public Library of Science 2012-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3475660/ /pubmed/23094120 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001864 Text en © 2012 Sousa-Figueiredo et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sousa-Figueiredo, José C.
Betson, Martha
Atuhaire, Aaron
Arinaitwe, Moses
Navaratnam, Annalan M. D.
Kabatereine, Narcis B.
Bickle, Quentin
Stothard, J. Russell
Performance and Safety of Praziquantel for Treatment of Intestinal Schistosomiasis in Infants and Preschool Children
title Performance and Safety of Praziquantel for Treatment of Intestinal Schistosomiasis in Infants and Preschool Children
title_full Performance and Safety of Praziquantel for Treatment of Intestinal Schistosomiasis in Infants and Preschool Children
title_fullStr Performance and Safety of Praziquantel for Treatment of Intestinal Schistosomiasis in Infants and Preschool Children
title_full_unstemmed Performance and Safety of Praziquantel for Treatment of Intestinal Schistosomiasis in Infants and Preschool Children
title_short Performance and Safety of Praziquantel for Treatment of Intestinal Schistosomiasis in Infants and Preschool Children
title_sort performance and safety of praziquantel for treatment of intestinal schistosomiasis in infants and preschool children
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3475660/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23094120
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001864
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