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Investigating Flubendazole as an Anthelmintic Treatment for Guinea Worm (Dracunculus medinensis): Clinical Trials in Laboratory-Reared Ferrets and Domestic Dogs in Chad

Authors :
Christopher A. Cleveland
Kayla B. Garrett
Erin K. Box
Alec T. Thompson
Ellen K. Haynes
Deborah L. Elder
Robert L. Richards
Ania A. Majewska
Sarah Anne J. Guagliardo
Ryan E. Wiegand
John A. Bryan II
Fernando Torres-Velez
Karmen Unterwegner
Mario Romero
Hubert Zirimwabagabo
Metinou Sidouin
Philip Tchindebet Oaukou
Mbang Mahammat Ada
Bongo Nare Richard Ngandolo
Charles D. Mackenzie
Timothy G. Geary
Adam J. Weiss
Michael J. Yabsley
Source :
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Dracunculus medinensis (Guinea worm [GW]), a zoonotic nematode targeted for eradication, has been managed using interventions aimed at humans; however, increases in domestic dog GW infections highlight the need for novel approaches. We conducted two clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of subcutaneously injected flubendazole (FBZ) as a treatment of GW infection. The first trial was conducted administering FBZ to experimentally infected ferrets; the second trial involved administering FBZ or a placebo to domestic dogs in the Republic of Tchad (Chad). We found contrasting results between the two trials. When adult gravid female GW were recovered from ferrets treated with FBZ, larvae presented in poor condition, with low to no motility, and an inability to infect copepods. Histopathology results indicated a disruption to morulae development within uteri of worms from treated animals. Results from the trial in Chadian dogs failed to indicate significant treatment of or prevention against GW infection. However, the difference in treatment intervals (1 month for ferrets and 6 months for dogs) or the timing of treatment (ferrets were treated later in the GW life-cycle than dogs) could explain different responses to the subcutaneous FBZ injections. Both trials provided valuable data guiding the use of FBZ in future trials (such as decreasing treatment intervals or increasing the dose of FBZ in dogs to increase exposure), and highlighted important lessons learned during the implementation of a field-based, double-blinded randomized control trial in Chadian dogs.

Details

ISSN :
14761645
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....98b88acbebe6210be92339b1303aade5