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Strongyloides seroprevalence before and after an ivermectin mass drug administration in a remote Australian Aboriginal community

BACKGROUND: Strongyloides seroprevalence is hyper-endemic in many Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, ranging from 35–60%. We report the impact on Strongyloides seroprevalence after two oral ivermectin mass drug administrations (MDAs) delivered 12 months apart in a remote A...

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Autores principales: Kearns, Therese M., Currie, Bart J., Cheng, Allen C., McCarthy, James, Carapetis, Jonathan R., Holt, Deborah C., Page, Wendy, Shield, Jennifer, Gundjirryirr, Roslyn, Mulholland, Eddie, Ward, Linda, Andrews, Ross M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5444847/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28505198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005607
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author Kearns, Therese M.
Currie, Bart J.
Cheng, Allen C.
McCarthy, James
Carapetis, Jonathan R.
Holt, Deborah C.
Page, Wendy
Shield, Jennifer
Gundjirryirr, Roslyn
Mulholland, Eddie
Ward, Linda
Andrews, Ross M.
author_facet Kearns, Therese M.
Currie, Bart J.
Cheng, Allen C.
McCarthy, James
Carapetis, Jonathan R.
Holt, Deborah C.
Page, Wendy
Shield, Jennifer
Gundjirryirr, Roslyn
Mulholland, Eddie
Ward, Linda
Andrews, Ross M.
author_sort Kearns, Therese M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Strongyloides seroprevalence is hyper-endemic in many Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, ranging from 35–60%. We report the impact on Strongyloides seroprevalence after two oral ivermectin mass drug administrations (MDAs) delivered 12 months apart in a remote Australian Aboriginal community. METHODS: Utilizing a before and after study design, we measured Strongyloides seroprevalence through population census with sequential MDAs at baseline and month 12. Surveys at months 6 and 18 determined changes in serostatus. Serodiagnosis was undertaken by ELISA that used sonicated Strongyloides ratti antigen to detect anti-Strongyloides IgG. Non-pregnant participants weighing ≥15 kg were administered a single 200 μg/kg ivermectin dose, repeated after 10–42 days if Strongyloides and/or scabies was diagnosed; others followed a standard alternative algorithm. A questionnaire on clinical symptoms was administered to identify adverse events from treatment and self-reported symptoms associated with serostatus. FINDINGS: We surveyed 1013 participants at the baseline population census and 1060 (n = 700 from baseline cohort and 360 new entrants) at month 12. Strongyloides seroprevalence fell from 21% (175/818) at baseline to 5% at month 6. For participants from the baseline cohort this reduction was sustained at month 12 (34/618, 6%), falling to 2% at month 18 after the second MDA. For new entrants to the cohort at month 12, seroprevalence reduced from 25% (75/297) to 7% at month 18. Strongyloides positive seroconversions for the baseline cohort six months after each MDA were 2.5% (4/157) at month 6 and 1% at month 18, whilst failure to serorevert remained unchanged at 18%. At 12 months, eosinophilia was identified in 59% of baseline seropositive participants and 89% of seropositive new entrants, compared with 47%baseline seronegative participants and 51% seronegative new entrants. Seropositivity was not correlated with haemoglobin or any self-reported clinical symptoms. Clinical symptoms ascertained on the day of treatment and 24–72 hrs after, did not identify any adverse events. SIGNIFICANCE: Two community ivermectin MDAs delivered 12 months apart by trained Aboriginal researchers in collaboration with non-Indigenous researchers resulted in a sustained and significant reduction in Strongyloides seroprevalence over 18 months. Similar reductions were seen in the baseline cohort and new entrants.
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spelling pubmed-54448472017-06-06 Strongyloides seroprevalence before and after an ivermectin mass drug administration in a remote Australian Aboriginal community Kearns, Therese M. Currie, Bart J. Cheng, Allen C. McCarthy, James Carapetis, Jonathan R. Holt, Deborah C. Page, Wendy Shield, Jennifer Gundjirryirr, Roslyn Mulholland, Eddie Ward, Linda Andrews, Ross M. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Strongyloides seroprevalence is hyper-endemic in many Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, ranging from 35–60%. We report the impact on Strongyloides seroprevalence after two oral ivermectin mass drug administrations (MDAs) delivered 12 months apart in a remote Australian Aboriginal community. METHODS: Utilizing a before and after study design, we measured Strongyloides seroprevalence through population census with sequential MDAs at baseline and month 12. Surveys at months 6 and 18 determined changes in serostatus. Serodiagnosis was undertaken by ELISA that used sonicated Strongyloides ratti antigen to detect anti-Strongyloides IgG. Non-pregnant participants weighing ≥15 kg were administered a single 200 μg/kg ivermectin dose, repeated after 10–42 days if Strongyloides and/or scabies was diagnosed; others followed a standard alternative algorithm. A questionnaire on clinical symptoms was administered to identify adverse events from treatment and self-reported symptoms associated with serostatus. FINDINGS: We surveyed 1013 participants at the baseline population census and 1060 (n = 700 from baseline cohort and 360 new entrants) at month 12. Strongyloides seroprevalence fell from 21% (175/818) at baseline to 5% at month 6. For participants from the baseline cohort this reduction was sustained at month 12 (34/618, 6%), falling to 2% at month 18 after the second MDA. For new entrants to the cohort at month 12, seroprevalence reduced from 25% (75/297) to 7% at month 18. Strongyloides positive seroconversions for the baseline cohort six months after each MDA were 2.5% (4/157) at month 6 and 1% at month 18, whilst failure to serorevert remained unchanged at 18%. At 12 months, eosinophilia was identified in 59% of baseline seropositive participants and 89% of seropositive new entrants, compared with 47%baseline seronegative participants and 51% seronegative new entrants. Seropositivity was not correlated with haemoglobin or any self-reported clinical symptoms. Clinical symptoms ascertained on the day of treatment and 24–72 hrs after, did not identify any adverse events. SIGNIFICANCE: Two community ivermectin MDAs delivered 12 months apart by trained Aboriginal researchers in collaboration with non-Indigenous researchers resulted in a sustained and significant reduction in Strongyloides seroprevalence over 18 months. Similar reductions were seen in the baseline cohort and new entrants. Public Library of Science 2017-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC5444847/ /pubmed/28505198 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005607 Text en © 2017 Kearns 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 (http://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
Kearns, Therese M.
Currie, Bart J.
Cheng, Allen C.
McCarthy, James
Carapetis, Jonathan R.
Holt, Deborah C.
Page, Wendy
Shield, Jennifer
Gundjirryirr, Roslyn
Mulholland, Eddie
Ward, Linda
Andrews, Ross M.
Strongyloides seroprevalence before and after an ivermectin mass drug administration in a remote Australian Aboriginal community
title Strongyloides seroprevalence before and after an ivermectin mass drug administration in a remote Australian Aboriginal community
title_full Strongyloides seroprevalence before and after an ivermectin mass drug administration in a remote Australian Aboriginal community
title_fullStr Strongyloides seroprevalence before and after an ivermectin mass drug administration in a remote Australian Aboriginal community
title_full_unstemmed Strongyloides seroprevalence before and after an ivermectin mass drug administration in a remote Australian Aboriginal community
title_short Strongyloides seroprevalence before and after an ivermectin mass drug administration in a remote Australian Aboriginal community
title_sort strongyloides seroprevalence before and after an ivermectin mass drug administration in a remote australian aboriginal community
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5444847/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28505198
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005607
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