14 results on '"Muhangi, Lawrence"'
Search Results
2. Factors associated with tuberculosis infection, and with anti-mycobacterial immune responses, among five year olds BCG-immunised at birth in Entebbe, Uganda
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Lule, Swaib Abubaker, Mawa, Patrice A., Nkurunungi, Gyaviira, Nampijja, Margaret, Kizito, Dennison, Akello, Florence, Muhangi, Lawrence, Elliott, Alison M., and Webb, Emily L.
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Male ,Rural Population ,Urban Population ,Helminthiasis ,HIV Infections ,Comorbidity ,Adaptive Immunity ,Article ,Crude culture filtrate protein ,Interferon-gamma ,Pregnancy ,Latent Tuberculosis ,Risk Factors ,Immunology and Microbiology(all) ,Helminth ,Prevalence ,Tuberculosis ,Humans ,Uganda ,Interleukin-13 ,Vaccination ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,HIV ,Infant ,Mycobacterium tuberculosis ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Mycobacterium bovis ,veterinary(all) ,Interleukin-10 ,Malaria ,Infectious Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,BCG Vaccine ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,Bacille Calmette–Guerin ,Interleukin-5 - Abstract
Highlights • Urban residence and history of TB contact/disease were associated with increased risk of latent TB infection at age five years. • BCG vaccine strain, LTBI, HIV and malaria infections, and anthropometry predict anti-mycobacterial immune responses. • Helminth infections do not influence response to BCG vaccination. • Cytokine responses at one year were not associated with LTBI at age five years., Background BCG is used widely as the sole licensed vaccine against tuberculosis, but it has variable efficacy and the reasons for this are still unclear. No reliable biomarkers to predict future protection against, or acquisition of, TB infection following immunisation have been identified. Lessons from BCG could be valuable in the development of effective tuberculosis vaccines. Objectives Within the Entebbe Mother and Baby Study birth cohort in Uganda, infants received BCG at birth. We investigated factors associated with latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) and with cytokine response to mycobacterial antigen at age five years. We also investigated whether cytokine responses at one year were associated with LTBI at five years of age. Methods Blood samples from age one and five years were stimulated using crude culture filtrates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a six-day whole blood assay. IFN-γ, IL-5, IL-13 and IL-10 production was measured. LTBI at five years was determined using T-SPOT.TB® assay. Associations with LTBI at five years were assessed using multivariable logistic regression. Multiple linear regression with bootstrapping was used to determine factors associated with cytokine responses at age five years. Results LTBI prevalence was 9% at age five years. Only urban residence and history of TB contact/disease were positively associated with LTBI. BCG vaccine strain, LTBI, HIV infection, asymptomatic malaria, growth z-scores, childhood anthelminthic treatment and maternal BCG scar were associated with cytokine responses at age five. Cytokine responses at one year were not associated with acquisition of LTBI by five years of age. Conclusion Although multiple factors influenced anti-myocbacterial immune responses at age five, factors likely to be associated with exposure to infectious cases (history of household contact, and urban residence) dominated the risk of LTBI.
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- 2015
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3. Effects of treating helminths during pregnancy and early childhood on risk of allergy-related outcomes: Follow-up of a randomized controlled trial.
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Namara, Benigna, Nash, Stephen, Lule, Swaib A., Akurut, Hellen, Mpairwe, Harriet, Akello, Florence, Tumusiime, Josephine, Kizza, Moses, Kabagenyi, Joyce, Nkurunungi, Gyaviira, Muhangi, Lawrence, Webb, Emily L., Muwanga, Moses, and Elliott, Alison M.
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HELMINTHS ,PREGNANCY ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,ALBENDAZOLE ,ECZEMA - Abstract
Background Helminth infections, common in low-income countries, may protect against allergy-related disease. Early exposure may be a key. In the Entebbe Mother and Baby Study, treating helminths during pregnancy resulted in increased eczema rates in early childhood. We followed the cohort to determine whether this translated to increased asthma rates at school age. Methods This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, conducted in Entebbe, Uganda, had three interventions. During pregnancy, women were randomized, simultaneously, to albendazole vs placebo and to praziquantel vs placebo. Their children were independently randomized to quarterly albendazole vs placebo from age 15 months to 5 years. We here report follow-up to age 9 years. Primary outcomes at 9 years were recent reported wheeze, skin prick test positivity ( SPT) to common allergens and allergen-specific IgE positivity to dust mite or cockroach. Secondary outcomes were doctor-diagnosed asthma and eczema rates between 5 and 9 years, recent eczema, rhinitis and urticaria at 9 years, and SPT and IgE responses to individual allergens. Results 2507 pregnant women were enrolled; 1215 children were seen at age nine, of whom 1188 are included in this analysis. Reported wheeze was rare at 9 years (3.7%) while SPT positivity (25.0%) and IgE positivity (44.1%) were common. There was no evidence of a treatment effect for any of the three interventions on any of the primary outcomes. Conclusions Prenatal and early-life treatment of helminths, in the absence of change in other exposures, is unlikely to increase the risk of atopic diseases later in childhood in this tropical, low-income setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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4. Maternal hookworm modifies risk factors for childhood eczema: results from a birth cohort in Uganda.
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Mpairwe, Harriet, Ndibazza, Juliet, Webb, Emily L., Nampijja, Margaret, Muhangi, Lawrence, Apule, Barbara, Lule, Swaib, Akurut, Hellen, Kizito, Dennison, Kakande, Mohammed, Jones, Frances M., Fitzsimmons, Colin M., Muwanga, Moses, Rodrigues, Laura C., Dunne, David W., and Elliott, Alison M.
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HOOKWORM disease ,ECZEMA ,ANTHELMINTICS ,PREGNANCY complications - Abstract
Background Worms may protect against allergy. Early-life worm exposure may be critical, but this has not been fully investigated. Objectives To investigate whether worms in pregnancy and in early childhood are associated with childhood eczema incidence. Methods The Entebbe Mother and Baby Study, an anthelminthic treatment trial, enrolled pregnant women between 2003 and 2005 in Uganda. Mothers were investigated for worms during pregnancy and children annually. Eczema was doctor-diagnosed from birth to age five years. A planned observational analysis was conducted within the trial cohort to investigate associations between worms and eczema. Results Data for 2345 live-born children were analysed. Hookworm was the most prevalent maternal worm (45%). Childhood worms were less prevalent. Eczema incidence was 4.68/100 person-years. Maternal hookworm was associated with reduced eczema incidence [adjusted hazard ratio (95% confidence interval), p-value: 0.71(0.51-0.99), 0.04] and modified effects of known risk factors for eczema: Dermatophagoides-specific IgE in children was positively associated with eczema incidence if the mother had no hookworm [2.72(1.11-6.63), 0.03], but not if the mother had hookworm [0.41(0.10-1.69), 0.22], interaction p-value = 0.03. Similar interactions were seen for maternal history of eczema {[2.87(1.31-6.27, 0.008) vs. [0.73(0.23-2.30), 0.60], interaction p-value = 0.05}, female gender {[1.82(1.22-2.73), 0.004 vs. [0.96(0.60-1.53), 0.87], interaction p-value = 0.04} and allergen-specific IgE. Childhood Trichuris trichiura and hookworm were inversely associated with eczema. Conclusions Maternal hookworm modifies effects of known risk factors for eczema. Mechanisms by which early-life worm exposures influence allergy need investigation. Worms or worm products, and intervention during pregnancy have potential for primary prevention of allergy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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5. Associations Between Maternal Helminth and Malaria Infections in Pregnancy and Clinical Malaria in the Offspring: A Birth Cohort in Entebbe, Uganda.
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Ndibazza, Juliet, Webb, Emily L., Lule, Swaib, Mpairwe, Harriet, Akello, Miriam, Oduru, Gloria, Kizza, Moses, Akurut, Helen, Muhangi, Lawrence, Magnussen, Pascal, Vennervald, Birgitte, and Elliott, Alison
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MALARIA ,PREGNANCY ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing - Abstract
Background. Helminth and malaria coinfections are common in the tropics. We investigated the hypothesis that prenatal exposure to these parasites might influence susceptibility to malaria in childhood.Methods. In a birth cohort of 2345 mother–child pairs in Uganda, maternal helminth and malaria infection status was determined during pregnancy, and childhood malaria episodes were recorded from birth to age 5 years. We examined associations between maternal infections and malaria in the offspring.Results. Common maternal infections were hookworm (45%), Mansonella perstans (21%), Schistosoma mansoni (18%), and Plasmodium falciparum (11%). At age 5 years, 69% of the children were still under follow-up. The incidence of malaria was 34 episodes per 100 child-years, and the mean prevalence of asymptomatic malaria at annual visits was 5.4%. Maternal hookworm and M. perstans infections were associated with an increased rate of childhood clinical malaria (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 1.24, 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.10–1.41; aHR, 1.20, 95% CI, 1.05–1.38, respectively). S. mansoni infection had no consistent association with childhood malaria.Conclusions. This is the first report of an association between helminth infections in pregnancy and malaria in the offspring and indicates that helminth infections in pregnancy may increase the burden of childhood malaria morbidity. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2013
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6. Factors affecting the infant antibody response to measles immunisation in Entebbe-Uganda.
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Kizito, Dennison, Tweyongyere, Robert, Namatovu, Alice, Webb, Emily L., Muhangi, Lawrence, Lule, Swaib A., Bukenya, Henry, Cose, Stephen, and Elliott, Alison M.
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VACCINATION ,MEASLES vaccines ,MEASLES ,INFANT health ,DISEASE prevalence ,REGRESSION analysis ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,IMMUNOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Vaccine failure is an important concern in the tropics with many contributing elements. Among them, it has been suggested that exposure to natural infections might contribute to vaccine failure and recurrent disease outbreaks. We tested this hypothesis by examining the influence of co-infections on maternal and infant measles-specific IgG levels. Methods: We conducted an observational analysis using samples and data that had been collected during a larger randomised controlled trial, the Entebbe Mother and Baby Study (ISRCTN32849447). For the present study, 711 pregnant women and their offspring were considered. Helminth infections including hookworm, Schistosoma mansoni and Mansonella perstans, along with HIV, malaria, and other potential confounding factors were determined in mothers during pregnancy and in their infants at age one year. Infants received their measles immunisation at age nine months. Levels of total IgG against measles were measured in mothers during pregnancy and at delivery, as well as in cord blood and from infants at age one year. Results: Among the 711 pregnant women studied, 66% had at least one helminth infection at enrolment, 41% had hookworm, 20% M. perstans and 19% S. mansoni. Asymptomatic malaria and HIV prevalence was 8% and 10% respectively. At enrolment, 96% of the women had measles-specific IgG levels considered protective (median 4274 mIU/ml (IQR 1784, 7767)). IgG levels in cord blood were positively correlated to maternal measles-specific IgG levels at delivery (r = 0.81, p < 0.0001). Among the infants at one year of age, median measles-specific IgG levels were markedly lower than in maternal and cord blood (median 370 mIU/ml (IQR 198, 656) p < 0.0001). In addition, only 75% of the infants had measles-specific IgG levels considered to be protective. In a multivariate regression analysis, factors associated with reduced measles-specific antibody levels in infancy were maternal malaria infection, infant malaria parasitaemia, infant HIV and infant wasting. There was no association with maternal helminth infection. Conclusion: Malaria and HIV infection in mothers during pregnancy, and in their infants, along with infant malnutrition, may result in reduction of the antibody response to measles immunisation in infancy. This re-emphasises the importance of malaria and HIV control, and support for infant nutrition, as these interventions may have benefits for vaccine efficacy in tropical settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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7. Impact of Anthelminthic Treatment in Pregnancy and Childhood on Immunisations, Infections and Eczema in Childhood: A Randomised Controlled Trial.
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Ndibazza, Juliet, Mpairwe, Harriet, Webb, Emily L., Mawa, Patrice A., Nampijja, Margaret, Muhangi, Lawrence, Kihembo, Macklyn, Lule, Swaib A., Rutebarika, Diana, Apule, Barbara, Akello, Florence, Akurut, Hellen, Oduru, Gloria, Naniima, Peter, Kizito, Dennison, Kizza, Moses, Kizindo, Robert, Tweyongere, Robert, Alcock, Katherine J., and Muwanga, Moses
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PREGNANCY ,ECZEMA in children ,ANTHELMINTICS ,IMMUNIZATION ,INFECTION - Abstract
Background: Helminth infections may modulate immune responses to unrelated pathogens and allergens; these effects may commence prenatally. We addressed the hypothesis that anthelminthic treatment in pregnancy and early childhood would improve responses to immunisation and modulate disease incidence in early childhood with both beneficial and detrimental effects. Methods and Findings: A randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was conducted in Entebbe, Uganda [ISRCTN32849447]. In three independent randomisations, 2507 pregnant women were allocated to receive single-dose albendazole or placebo, and praziquantel or placebo; 2016 of their offspring were randomised to receive quarterly singledose albendazole or placebo from age 15 months to 5 years. Primary outcomes were post-immunisation recall responses to BCG and tetanus antigens, and incidence of malaria, diarrhoea, and pneumonia; incidence of eczema was an important secondary outcome. Analysis was by intention-to-treat. Of 2345 live births, 1622 (69%) children remained in follow-up at age 5 years. 68% of mothers at enrolment, and 11% of five-year-olds, had helminth infections. Maternal hookworm and Schistosoma mansoni were effectively treated by albendazole and praziquantel, respectively; and childhood hookworm and Ascaris by quarterly albendazole. Incidence rates of malaria, diarrhoea, pneumonia, and eczema were 34, 65, 10 and 5 per 100 py, respectively. Albendazole during pregnancy caused an increased rate of eczema in the children (HR 1.58 (95% CI 1.15-2.17), p = 0.005). Quarterly albendazole during childhood was associated with reduced incidence of clinical malaria (HR 0.85 (95% CI 0.73-0.98), p = 0.03). There were no consistent effects of the interventions on any other outcome. Conclusions: Routine use of albendazole in pregnancy may not always be beneficial, even in tropical developing countries. By contrast, regular albendazole treatment in preschool children may have an additional benefit for malaria control where helminths and malaria are co-endemic. Given the low helminth prevalence in our children, the effect of albendazole on malaria is likely to be direct. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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8. Effects of Maternal Worm Infections and Anthelminthic Treatment during Pregnancy on Infant Motor and Neurocognitive Functioning.
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Nampijja, Margaret, Apule, Barbara, Lule, Swaib, Akurut, Hellen, Muhangi, Lawrence, Webb, Emily L., Lewis, Charlie, Elliott, Alison M., and Alcock, Katie J.
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HELMINTHS ,PARASITIC diseases ,ANTHELMINTICS ,PREGNANCY ,MOTOR ability ,INFANT psychology ,COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that maternal worm infections in pregnancy affect infant motor and neurocognitive development, and that anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy can reverse these effects. We used measures which examine infant motor, cognitive and executive function, including inhibition. We assessed 983 Ugandan infants aged 15 months, using locally appropriate measures within the Entebbe Mother and Baby Study, a trial of anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy. Key exposures were maternal worm infections and anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy. Effects of other health and social factors were controlled for statistically. Of the five major worm species found in the pregnant women, two had influences on the developmental measures: Maternal Martsonella perstans and Strongyloides stercoralis infections showed negative associations with the A-not B-task, and Language, respectively. Performance on other psychomotor and cognitive measures was associated with illnesses during infancy and infants' behavior during assessment, but not with maternal worm infections. There were no positive effects of maternal anthelminthic treatment on infant abilities. Mansonella perstans and Strongyloides stercoralis infection during pregnancy seem associated with impaired early executive function and language, respectively, but single-dose anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy was not beneficial. The biological mechanisms that could underlie these neurocognitive effects are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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9. Treatment with anthelminthics during pregnancy: what gains and what risks for the mother and child?
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ELLIOTT, ALISON M., NDIBAZZA, JULIET, MPAIRWE, HARRIET, MUHANGI, LAWRENCE, WEBB, EMILY L., KIZITO, DENNISON, MAWA, PATRICE, TWEYONGYERE, ROBERT, and MUWANGA, MOSES
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ANTHELMINTICS ,PREGNANT women ,ALBENDAZOLE ,PUBLIC health ,ANTIPARASITIC agents - Abstract
In 1994 and 2002, respectively, the World Health Organisation proposed that treatment for hookworm and schistosomiasis could be provided during pregnancy. It was hoped that this might have benefits for maternal anaemia, fetal growth and perinatal mortality; a beneficial effect on the infant response to immunisation was also hypothesised. Three trials have now been conducted. Two have examined the effects of benzimidazoles; one (the Entebbe Mother and Baby Study) the effects of albendazole and praziquantel. All three were conducted in settings of high prevalence but low intensity helminth infection. Results suggest that, in such settings and given adequate provision of haematinics, the benefit of routine anthelminthics during pregnancy for maternal anaemia may be small; none of the other expected benefits has yet been demonstrated. The Entebbe Mother and Baby Study found a significant adverse effect of albendazole on the incidence of infantile eczema in the whole study population, and of praziquantel on the incidence of eczema among infants of mothers with Schistosoma mansoni. Further studies are required in settings that differ in helminth species and infection intensities. Further research is required to determine whether increased rates of infantile eczema translate to long-term susceptibility to allergy, and to explore the underlying mechanisms of these effects. The risks and benefits of routine anthelminthic treatment in antenatal clinics may need to be reconsidered. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2011
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10. Anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy is associated with increased risk of infantile eczema: randomised-controlled trial results.
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Mpairwe, Harriet, Webb, Emily L., Muhangi, Lawrence, Ndibazza, Juliet, Akishule, Denise, Nampijja, Margaret, Sophy Ngom-wegi, Tumusime, Josephine, Jones, Frances M., Fitzsimmons, Colin, Dunne, David W., Muwanga, Moses, Rodrigues, Laura C., and Elliott, Alison M.
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TREATMENT of eczema ,WHEEZE ,ANTHELMINTICS ,PREGNANCY complications ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Allergy is commoner in developed than in developing countries. Chronic worm infections show inverse associations with allergy, and prenatal exposures may be critical to allergy risk. Objective: To determine whether anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy increases the risk of allergy in infancy. Methods: A randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial on treatment in pregnancy with albendazole versus placebo and praziquantel versus placebo was conducted in Uganda, with a 2×2 factorial design; 2507 women were enrolled; infants' allergy events were recorded prospectively. The main outcome was doctor-diagnosed infantile eczema. Results: Worms were detected in 68% of women before treatment. Doctor-diagnosed infantile eczema incidence was 10.4/100 infant years. Maternal albendazole treatment was associated with a significantly increased risk of eczema [Cox HR (95% CI), p: 1.82 (1.26-2.64), 0.002]; this effect was slightly stronger among infants whose mothers had no albendazole-susceptible worms than among infants whose mothers had such worms, although this difference was not statistically significant. Praziquantel showed no effect overall but was associated with increased risk among infants of mothers with Schistosoma mansoni [2.65 (1.16-6.08), interaction p = 0.02]. In a sample of infants, skin prick test reactivity and allergen-specific IgE were both associated with doctor-diagnosed eczema, indicating atopic aetiology. Albendazole was also strongly associated with reported recurrent wheeze [1.58 (1.13-2.22), 0.008]; praziquantel showed no effect. Conclusions: The detrimental effects of treatment suggest that exposure to maternal worm infections in utero may protect against eczema and wheeze in infancy. The results for albendazole are also consistent with a direct drug effect. Further studies are required to investigate mechanisms of these effects, possible benefits of worms or worm products in primary prevention of allergy, and the possibility that routine deworming during pregnancy may promote allergic disease in the offspring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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11. Associations between mild-to-moderate anaemia in pregnancy and helminth, malaria and HIV infection in Entebbe, Uganda
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Muhangi, Lawrence, Woodburn, Patrick, Omara, Mildred, Omoding, Nicholas, Kizito, Dennison, Mpairwe, Harriet, Nabulime, Juliet, Ameke, Christine, Morison, Linda A., and Elliott, Alison M.
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ANEMIA in pregnancy ,HELMINTHS - Abstract
Summary: It is suggested that helminths, particularly hookworm and schistosomiasis, may be important causes of anaemia in pregnancy. We assessed the associations between mild-to-moderate anaemia (haemoglobin >8.0g/dl and <11.2g/dl) and helminths, malaria and HIV among 2507 otherwise healthy pregnant women at enrolment to a trial of deworming in pregnancy in Entebbe, Uganda. The prevalence of anaemia was 39.7%. The prevalence of hookworm was 44.5%, Mansonella perstans 21.3%, Schistosoma mansoni 18.3%, Strongyloides 12.3%, Trichuris 9.1%, Ascaris 2.3%, asymptomatic Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemia 10.9% and HIV 11.9%. Anaemia showed little association with the presence of any helminth, but showed a strong association with malaria (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 3.22, 95% CI 2.43–4.26) and HIV (AOR 2.46, 95% CI 1.90–3.19). There was a weak association between anaemia and increasing hookworm infection intensity. Thus, although highly prevalent, helminths showed little association with mild-to-moderate anaemia in this population, but HIV and malaria both showed a strong association. This result may relate to relatively good nutrition and low helminth infection intensity. These findings are pertinent to estimating the disease burden of helminths and other infections in pregnancy. [Clinical Trial No. ISRCTN32849447] [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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12. RESEARCH LETTER Helminth Infection During Pregnancy and Development of Infantile Eczema.
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Elliott, Alison M., Mpairwe, Harriet, Quigley, Maria A., Nampijja, Margaret, Muhangi, Lawrence, Oweka-Onyee, James, Muwanga, Moses, Ndibazza, Juliet, and Whitworth, James A. G.
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LETTERS to the editor ,HELMINTHS ,ECZEMA in children - Abstract
The article presents a letter to the editor about the relationship between maternal helminth infection and infantile eczema, by Alison M. Elliott, Harriet Mpairwe, Maria A. Quigley, Margaret Nampijja, Moses Muwanga, Lawrence Muhangi, James Oweka-Onyee, Juliet Ndibazza, and James A. G. Whitworth.
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- 2005
13. Assessing the external validity of a randomized controlled trial of anthelminthics in mothers and their children in Entebbe, Uganda
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Millard, James D, Muhangi, Lawrence, Sewankambo, Moses, Ndibazza, Juliet, Elliott, Alison M, and Webb, Emily L
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Anthelmintics ,Anthelminthics ,Research ,Patient Selection ,Mothers ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Generalizability ,External validity ,Social Class ,Pregnancy ,Helminths ,Child, Preschool ,Cluster sample community survey ,Humans ,Uganda ,Female ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Abstract
Background The ‘external validity’ of randomized controlled trials is an important measure of quality, but is often not formally assessed. Trials concerning mass drug administration for helminth control are likely to guide public health policy and careful interpretation of their context is needed. We aimed to determine how representative participants in one such trial were of their community. We explore implications for trial interpretation and resulting public health recommendations. Methods The trial assessed was the Entebbe Mother and Baby Study (EMaBS), a trial of anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy and early childhood. In a novel approach for assessing external validity, we conducted a two-stage cluster sample community survey within the trial catchment area and compared characteristics of potentially-eligible community children with characteristics of children participating in the trial. Results A total of 173 children aged three to five-years-old were surveyed from 480 households. Of children surveyed, we estimated that mothers of 60% would have been eligible for recruitment, and of these, 31% had actually been enrolled. Children surveyed were compared to 199 trial children in the same age group reviewed at annual trial visits during the same time period. There were significant differences in ethnicity between the trial participants and the community children, and in socioeconomic status, with those in the trial having, on average, more educated parents and higher maternal employment. Trial children were less likely to have barefoot exposure and more likely to use insecticide-treated bed nets. There were no significant differences in numbers of reported illness events over the last year. Conclusions The trial had not enrolled all eligible participants, and those enrolled were of higher socioeconomic status, and had lower risk of exposure to the parasitic infections targeted by the trial interventions. It is possible the trial may have underestimated the absolute effects of anthelminthic treatment during pregnancy and early childhood, although the fact that there were no differences in reported incidence of common infectious diseases (one of the primary outcomes of EMaBS) between the two groups provides reassurance. Concurrent community surveys may be an effective way to test the external validity of trials. EMaBS Trial registration ISRCTN32849447, registered 22 July 2005 Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1745-6215-15-310) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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14. Maternal recall of birthweight and birth size in Entebbe, Uganda.
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Lule, Swaib A., Webb, Emily L., Ndibazza, Juliet, Nampijja, Margaret, Muhangi, Lawrence, Akello, Florence, Kakande, Muhammed, Kizindo, Robert, and Elliott, Alison M.
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MOTHERHOOD ,BIRTH weight ,BIRTH size ,PREGNANCY ,MEDICAL statistics ,EPIDEMIOLOGY - Abstract
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- 2012
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