1. Dynamics of antigenemia and transmission intensity of Wuchereria bancrofti following cessation of mass drug administration in a formerly highly endemic region of Mali
- Author
-
M. Dembele, Yaya Ibrahim Coulibaly, Amy D. Klion, Lamine Soumaoro, Moses J. Bockarie, Katja Polman, Louise A. Kelly-Hope, Modibo Sangare, Benoit Dembele, Thomas B. Nutman, Dominique Kyelem, Yeya T. Touré, Sekou F. Traore, Siaka Konate, Moussa Brema Sangare, Housseini Dolo, Abdallah A. Diallo, Salif S. Doumbia, Michel E. Coulibaly, Ilo Dicko, and Siaka Y. Coulibaly
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Veterinary medicine ,wc_880 ,Anopheles gambiae ,030231 tropical medicine ,Population ,Prevalence ,Antibodies, Helminth ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Post-MDA surveillance ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Mali ,Chromatography, Affinity ,wa_110 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Elephantiasis, Filarial ,Drug Therapy ,qx_301 ,Anopheles ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Disease Transmission, Infectious ,Animals ,Humans ,Wuchereria bancrofti ,Mass drug administration ,education ,Transmission assessment survey ,education.field_of_study ,Anopheles gambiae complex ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Research ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,Filaricides ,Infectious Diseases ,Parasitology ,Antigens, Helminth ,Tropical medicine ,Epidemiological Monitoring - Abstract
After seven annual rounds of mass drug administration (MDA) in six Malian villages highly endemic for Wuchereria bancrofti (overall prevalence rate of 42.7%), treatment was discontinued in 2008. Surveillance was performed over the ensuing 5 years to detect recrudescence. Circulating filarial antigen (CFA) was measured using immunochromatographic card tests (ICT) and Og4C3 ELISA in 6–7 year-olds. Antibody to the W. bancrofti infective larval stage (L3) antigen, Wb123, was tested in the same population in 2012. Microfilaraemia was assessed in ICT-positive subjects. Anopheles gambiae complex specimens were collected monthly using human landing catch (HLC) and pyrethrum spray catch (PSC). Anopheles gambiae complex infection with W. bancrofti was determined by dissection and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of mosquito pools. Annual CFA prevalence rates using ICT in children increased over time from 0% (0/289) in 2009 to 2.7% (8/301) in 2011, 3.9% (11/285) in 2012 and 4.5% (14/309) in 2013 (trend χ 2 = 11.85, df =3, P = 0.0006). Wb123 antibody positivity rates in 2013 were similar to the CFA prevalence by ELISA (5/285). Although two W. bancrofti-infected Anopheles were observed by dissection among 12,951 mosquitoes collected by HLC, none had L3 larvae when tested by L3-specific RT-PCR. No positive pools were detected among the mosquitoes collected by pyrethrum spray catch. Whereas ICT in 6–7 year-olds was the major surveillance tool, ICT positivity was also assessed in older children and adults (8–65 years old). CFA prevalence decreased in this group from 4.9% (39/800) to 3.5% (28/795) and 2.8% (50/1,812) in 2009, 2011 and 2012, respectively (trend χ 2 = 7.361, df =2, P = 0.0067). Some ICT-positive individuals were microfilaraemic in 2009 [2.6% (1/39)] and 2011 [8.3% (3/36)], but none were positive in 2012 or 2013. Although ICT rates in children increased over the 5-year surveillance period, the decrease in ICT prevalence in the older group suggests a reduction in transmission intensity. This was consistent with the failure to detect infective mosquitoes or microfilaraemia. The threshold of ICT positivity in children may need to be re-assessed and other adjunct surveillance tools considered.
- Published
- 2016