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Epidemiology of soil-transmitted helminths following sustained implementation of routine preventive chemotherapy: Demographics and baseline results of a cluster randomised trial in southern Malawi

Malawi has successfully leveraged multiple delivery platforms to scale-up and sustain the implementation of preventive chemotherapy (PCT) for the control of morbidity caused by soil-transmitted helminths (STH). Sentinel monitoring demonstrates this strategy has been successful in reducing STH infect...

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Autores principales: Witek-McManus, Stefan, Simwanza, James, Chisambi, Alvin B., Kepha, Stella, Kamwendo, Zachariah, Mbwinja, Alfred, Samikwa, Lyson, Oswald, William E., Kennedy, David S., Timothy, Joseph W. S., Legge, Hugo, Galagan, Sean R., Emmanuel-Fabula, Mira, Schaer, Fabian, Ásbjörnsdóttir, Kristjana, Halliday, Katherine E., Walson, Judd L., Juziwelo, Lazarus, Bailey, Robin L., Kalua, Khumbo, Pullan, Rachel L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8224978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33979325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009292
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author Witek-McManus, Stefan
Simwanza, James
Chisambi, Alvin B.
Kepha, Stella
Kamwendo, Zachariah
Mbwinja, Alfred
Samikwa, Lyson
Oswald, William E.
Kennedy, David S.
Timothy, Joseph W. S.
Legge, Hugo
Galagan, Sean R.
Emmanuel-Fabula, Mira
Schaer, Fabian
Ásbjörnsdóttir, Kristjana
Halliday, Katherine E.
Walson, Judd L.
Juziwelo, Lazarus
Bailey, Robin L.
Kalua, Khumbo
Pullan, Rachel L.
author_facet Witek-McManus, Stefan
Simwanza, James
Chisambi, Alvin B.
Kepha, Stella
Kamwendo, Zachariah
Mbwinja, Alfred
Samikwa, Lyson
Oswald, William E.
Kennedy, David S.
Timothy, Joseph W. S.
Legge, Hugo
Galagan, Sean R.
Emmanuel-Fabula, Mira
Schaer, Fabian
Ásbjörnsdóttir, Kristjana
Halliday, Katherine E.
Walson, Judd L.
Juziwelo, Lazarus
Bailey, Robin L.
Kalua, Khumbo
Pullan, Rachel L.
author_sort Witek-McManus, Stefan
collection PubMed
description Malawi has successfully leveraged multiple delivery platforms to scale-up and sustain the implementation of preventive chemotherapy (PCT) for the control of morbidity caused by soil-transmitted helminths (STH). Sentinel monitoring demonstrates this strategy has been successful in reducing STH infection in school-age children, although our understanding of the contemporary epidemiological profile of STH across the broader community remains limited. As part of a multi-site trial evaluating the feasibility of interrupting STH transmission across three countries, this study aimed to describe the baseline demographics and the prevalence, intensity and associated risk factors of STH infection in Mangochi district, southern Malawi. Between October-December 2017, a community census was conducted across the catchment area of seven primary healthcare facilities, enumerating 131,074 individuals across 124 villages. A cross-sectional parasitological survey was then conducted between March-May 2018 in the censused area as a baseline for a cluster randomised trial. An age-stratified random sample of 6,102 individuals were assessed for helminthiasis by Kato-Katz and completed a detailed risk-factor questionnaire. The age-cluster weighted prevalence of any STH infection was 7.8% (95% C.I. 7.0%-8.6%) comprised predominantly of hookworm species and of entirely low-intensity infections. The presence and intensity of infection was significantly higher in men and in adults. Infection was negatively associated with risk factors that included increasing levels of relative household wealth, higher education levels of any adult household member, current school attendance, or recent deworming. In this setting of relatively high coverage of sanitation facilities, there was no association between hookworm and reported access to sanitation, handwashing facilities, or water facilities. These results describe a setting that has reduced the prevalence of STH to a very low level, and confirms many previously recognised risk-factors for infection. Expanding the delivery of anthelmintics to groups where STH infection persist could enable Malawi to move past the objective of elimination of morbidity, and towards the elimination of STH. Trial registration: NCT03014167.
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spelling pubmed-82249782021-07-07 Epidemiology of soil-transmitted helminths following sustained implementation of routine preventive chemotherapy: Demographics and baseline results of a cluster randomised trial in southern Malawi Witek-McManus, Stefan Simwanza, James Chisambi, Alvin B. Kepha, Stella Kamwendo, Zachariah Mbwinja, Alfred Samikwa, Lyson Oswald, William E. Kennedy, David S. Timothy, Joseph W. S. Legge, Hugo Galagan, Sean R. Emmanuel-Fabula, Mira Schaer, Fabian Ásbjörnsdóttir, Kristjana Halliday, Katherine E. Walson, Judd L. Juziwelo, Lazarus Bailey, Robin L. Kalua, Khumbo Pullan, Rachel L. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Malawi has successfully leveraged multiple delivery platforms to scale-up and sustain the implementation of preventive chemotherapy (PCT) for the control of morbidity caused by soil-transmitted helminths (STH). Sentinel monitoring demonstrates this strategy has been successful in reducing STH infection in school-age children, although our understanding of the contemporary epidemiological profile of STH across the broader community remains limited. As part of a multi-site trial evaluating the feasibility of interrupting STH transmission across three countries, this study aimed to describe the baseline demographics and the prevalence, intensity and associated risk factors of STH infection in Mangochi district, southern Malawi. Between October-December 2017, a community census was conducted across the catchment area of seven primary healthcare facilities, enumerating 131,074 individuals across 124 villages. A cross-sectional parasitological survey was then conducted between March-May 2018 in the censused area as a baseline for a cluster randomised trial. An age-stratified random sample of 6,102 individuals were assessed for helminthiasis by Kato-Katz and completed a detailed risk-factor questionnaire. The age-cluster weighted prevalence of any STH infection was 7.8% (95% C.I. 7.0%-8.6%) comprised predominantly of hookworm species and of entirely low-intensity infections. The presence and intensity of infection was significantly higher in men and in adults. Infection was negatively associated with risk factors that included increasing levels of relative household wealth, higher education levels of any adult household member, current school attendance, or recent deworming. In this setting of relatively high coverage of sanitation facilities, there was no association between hookworm and reported access to sanitation, handwashing facilities, or water facilities. These results describe a setting that has reduced the prevalence of STH to a very low level, and confirms many previously recognised risk-factors for infection. Expanding the delivery of anthelmintics to groups where STH infection persist could enable Malawi to move past the objective of elimination of morbidity, and towards the elimination of STH. Trial registration: NCT03014167. Public Library of Science 2021-05-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8224978/ /pubmed/33979325 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009292 Text en © 2021 Witek-McManus 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
Witek-McManus, Stefan
Simwanza, James
Chisambi, Alvin B.
Kepha, Stella
Kamwendo, Zachariah
Mbwinja, Alfred
Samikwa, Lyson
Oswald, William E.
Kennedy, David S.
Timothy, Joseph W. S.
Legge, Hugo
Galagan, Sean R.
Emmanuel-Fabula, Mira
Schaer, Fabian
Ásbjörnsdóttir, Kristjana
Halliday, Katherine E.
Walson, Judd L.
Juziwelo, Lazarus
Bailey, Robin L.
Kalua, Khumbo
Pullan, Rachel L.
Epidemiology of soil-transmitted helminths following sustained implementation of routine preventive chemotherapy: Demographics and baseline results of a cluster randomised trial in southern Malawi
title Epidemiology of soil-transmitted helminths following sustained implementation of routine preventive chemotherapy: Demographics and baseline results of a cluster randomised trial in southern Malawi
title_full Epidemiology of soil-transmitted helminths following sustained implementation of routine preventive chemotherapy: Demographics and baseline results of a cluster randomised trial in southern Malawi
title_fullStr Epidemiology of soil-transmitted helminths following sustained implementation of routine preventive chemotherapy: Demographics and baseline results of a cluster randomised trial in southern Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiology of soil-transmitted helminths following sustained implementation of routine preventive chemotherapy: Demographics and baseline results of a cluster randomised trial in southern Malawi
title_short Epidemiology of soil-transmitted helminths following sustained implementation of routine preventive chemotherapy: Demographics and baseline results of a cluster randomised trial in southern Malawi
title_sort epidemiology of soil-transmitted helminths following sustained implementation of routine preventive chemotherapy: demographics and baseline results of a cluster randomised trial in southern malawi
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8224978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33979325
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0009292
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