1. New Insights Into the Kinetics and Variability of Egg Excretion in Controlled Human Hookworm Infections.
- Author
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Hoogerwerf, Marie-Astrid, Coffeng, Luc E, Brienen, Eric A T, Janse, Jacqueline J, Langenberg, Marijke C C, Kruize, Yvonne C M, Gootjes, Chelsea, Manurung, Mikhael D, Dekker, Mark, Becker, Luke, Erkens, Marianne A A, Beek, Martha T van der, Ganesh, Munisha S, Feijt, Carola, Winkel, Beatrice M F, Westra, Inge M, Meij, Pauline, Loukas, Alex, Visser, Leo G, and Vlas, Sake J de
- Subjects
HOOKWORMS ,EXCRETION ,VACCINE effectiveness ,EGGS ,NEMATODE physiology ,ANIMAL experimentation ,BIOLOGICAL models ,BLOOD cell count ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EOSINOPHILS ,FECES ,HOOKWORM disease ,INSECT larvae ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,NEMATODES ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,HUMAN research subjects - Abstract
Four healthy volunteers were infected with 50 Necator americanus infective larvae (L3) in a controlled human hookworm infection trial and followed for 52 weeks. The kinetics of fecal egg counts in volunteers was assessed with Bayesian multilevel analysis, which revealed an increase between weeks 7 and 13, followed by an egg density plateau of about 1000 eggs/g of feces. Variation in egg counts was minimal between same-day measurements but varied considerably between days, particularly during the plateau phase. These analyses pave the way for the controlled human hookworm model to accelerate drug and vaccine efficacy studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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