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Endpoints for lymphatic filariasis programs.


In 2000, annual mass administration of diethlycarbamazine and albendazole began in Leogane Commune, Haiti, to interrupt transmission of lymphatic lymphatic /lym·phat·ic/ (lim-fat´ik)
1. pertaining to lymph or to a lymphatic vessel.

2. a lymphatic vessel.


lym·phat·ic
adj.
 filariasis filariasis: see elephantiasis.  (LF). After 5 years of treatment, microfilaremia, antigenemia, and mosquito infection rates were significantly reduced, but LF transmission was not interrupted. These finding have implications for other LF elimination programs.

*********

Globally, more than 1 billion persons are at risk for lymphatic filariasis (LF), a mosquito-transmitted parasitic infection that causes lymphedema and hydrocele hydrocele /hy·dro·cele/ (hi´dro-sel) a circumscribed collection of fluid, especially in the tunica vaginalis of the testis or along the spermatic cord.

hy·dro·cele
n.
. Transmission of LF can be interrupted by annual mass treatment with drugs that target microfilariae Microfilariae
The larvae and infective form of filarial worms.

Mentioned in: Filariasis
, the stage of the parasite that circulates in the blood (1,2). Programs in Egypt, Samoa, Zanzibar, and other settings have recently completed 5 rounds of mass drug administration (MDA (1) (Monochrome Display Adapter) The first IBM PC monochrome video display standard for text. Due to its lack of graphics, MDA cards were often replaced with Hercules cards, which provided both text and graphics. See PC display modes and Hercules Graphics. ) (3,4), a proposed endpoint for treatment, and are now confronted with a critical question: can MDA be stopped without fear of recrudescence recrudescence /re·cru·des·cence/ (re?kroo-des´ens) recurrence of symptoms after temporary abatement.recrudes´cent

re·cru·des·cence
n.
 of LF infection?

The LF demonstration project in Leogane, Haiti, was designed as an operational research project to monitor the impact of MDA on LF infection in a high-prevalence setting. The intervention was annual MDA with diethylcarbamazine (DEC) and albendazole. We discuss how sentinel site data were used to determine whether to continue MDA after 5 rounds and how our experience may be relevant to other LF programs.

Leogane is located 30 km west of Port-au-Prince. Before the first MDA in 2000, 4 sentinel sites in Leogane commune were selected for annual follow-up of microfilaremia and antigenemia (5). Monitoring of filarial Filarial
Threadlike. The word "filament" is formed from the same root word.

Mentioned in: Elephantiasis


filarial

pertaining to or emanating from filariae.
 infection prevalence in the vector, Culex Culex /Cu·lex/ (ku´leks) a genus of mosquitoes found throughout the world, many species of which are vectors of disease-producing organisms.

Cu·lex
n.
 quinquefasciatus, began in these sites 3 months before the first MDA, using CDC See Control Data, century date change and Back Orifice.

CDC - Control Data Corporation
 gravid gravid /grav·id/ (grav´id) pregnant.

grav·id
adj.
Carrying eggs or developing young.



gra·vid
 traps (Model 1712, J.W. Hock hock: see wine.  Co., Gainesville, FL, USA) (6); testing continued on a semimonthly sem·i·month·ly  
adj.
Occurring or issued twice a month.

n. pl. sem·i·month·lies
A semimonthly publication.

adv.
At intervals twice monthly. See Usage Note at bi-1.

Noun 1.
 basis. Infected mosquitoes were defined as those carrying microfilariae or larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
 (L1-L3); L3 were the infectious larval stage larval stage - Describes a period of monomaniacal concentration on coding apparently passed through by all fledgling hackers. Common symptoms include the perpetration of more than one 36-hour hacking run in a given week; neglect of all other activities including usual basics like . Protocols for collecting data from sentinel sites were approved by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center.  Institutional Review Board and the Ethics Committee ethics committee A multidisciplinary hospital body composed of a broad spectrum of personnel–eg, physicians, nurses, social workers, priests, and others, which addresses the moral and ethical issues within the hospital. See DNR, Institutional review board.  at Hopital Ste. Croix.

In October 2000 and every October thereafter, DEC (6 mg/kg) and albendazole (400 mg; GlaxoSmithKline, Brentford, UK) were co-administered at stationary posts to persons >2 years of age, excluding pregnant women and persons too ill to receive the drugs. Adverse events were monitored each year by recording the number of persons who returned to distribution posts with complaints. Cluster surveys were conducted after the first and third MDA to assess coverage and the effect of health messages on compliance (7,8).

Reported coverage in 2000-2004 for MDAs 1-5 was 69%, 50%, 84%, 89%, and 104%, respectively (Table). Decreased coverage in 2001 may have been related to a relatively high incidence of adverse events caused by death of microfilariae and adult worms during the first MDA (9). The increase in reported coverage in 2004 may have been due to an influx of displaced persons from areas of Haiti affected by civil strife. Survey-based coverage in 2000 and 2002 was 71% and 79%, respectively (7,8). Adverse events diminished with each year of treatment, from 23.1% of persons treated during 2000 to 3% during 2004 (p<0.0001).

Baseline microfilaremia prevalence rates were 0.8%, 7%, 12%, and 16% in the sentinel sites of Mapou, Barrier-Jeudi, Masson-Mathieu, and Leogane, respectively (Figure 1). Microfilaremia prevalence decreased significantly in each of the sentinel sites (Mapou, p = 0.0291; each of the other sites, p<0.0001). Antigenemia prevalence declined less dramatically, by 18.6%, 34.6%, 74.2%, and 54.7% in Mapou, Barrier Jeudi, Masson-Mathieu, and Leogane, respectively (p<0.0001 in all sites except Mapou).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

Baseline mosquito infection rates 3 months before the first MDA were 0.5%, 2.9%, 3.5%, and 4.0% in Mapou, Masson-Mathieu, Leogane, and Barrier-Jeudi, respectively. After MDA 1, infection prevalence decreased significantly only in Masson-Mathieu (p = 0.004); however, after 2 rounds of MDA, infection was reduced significantly at all sites (p<0.007) except Mapou (Figure 2). After MDA 4, infection prevalence was 0% during some months at all sentinel sites, although infected mosquitoes were detected sporadically at all sites but Mapou. The prevalence of infective mosquitoes was lower than the prevalence of infected mosquitoes (p<0.05), but parallel declines were observed after MDA (data not shown).

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

These data were collected to monitor progress and to provide a basis for programmatic decisions. In January 2005, 3 months after MDA 5, a meeting was convened in Leogane with program and ministry staff to discuss the need for further MDA. Sustained reductions in LF infection in both humans and mosquitoes demonstrated the substantial effects of the intervention through 4 MDA rounds. However, persistent antigenemia and sporadic parasitemia parasitemia /par·a·si·te·mia/ (par?ah-si-te´me-ah) the presence of parasites, especially malarial forms, in the blood.

par·a·si·te·mi·a
n.
The presence of parasites in the blood.
 were detected at all sentinel sites. Project leaders adopted a conservative approach and planned for MDA 6 on the basis of the evidence of continued transmission in the sentinel sites.

Several factors supported this decision, including detection of infections in both humans and mosquitoes and concerns about systematic noncompliance noncompliance

failure of the owner to follow instructions, particularly in administering medication as prescribed; a cause of a less than expected response to treatment.

noncompliance 
 (8), the potential for inflated coverage estimates due to population migration, the nonrepresentativeness of sentinel sites for estimating MDA impact, and the insensitivity of blood smears for monitoring microfilaremia. Since the cost of an additional MDA was not prohibitive, project staff decided that the evidence of continued transmission, the health benefits of mass treatment to the community, and the risk of stopping treatment prematurely justified a sixth round of MDA in October 2005. Results from Leogane and other programs have demonstrated that 5 rounds of MDA may not be sufficient to interrupt transmission when baseline antigenemia is high, whereas in low-prevalence areas <5 rounds appears to be adequate (3). Mathematical models as well as program experience suggest that the number of MDAs required depends on baseline intensity of infection, assuming adequate coverage (10,11).

Adequate monitoring data are important for making decisions regarding continuation of mass treatment. Microfilaremia and immunochromatographic card test (ICT (1) (Information and Communications Technology) An umbrella term for the information technology field. See IT.

(2) (International Computers and Tabulators) See ICL.

1. (testing) ICT - In Circuit Test.
) testing are the gold standards for measuring the impact of MDA; however, nocturnal blood collection required for microfilaria microfilaria /mi·cro·fi·la·ria/ (-fi-lar´e-ah) [L.] the prelarval stage of Filarioidea in the blood of humans and in the tissues of the vector; sometimes incorrectly used as a genus name.  testing is inconvenient, the high cost of the ICT is a concern ([approximately equal to] $2.65), and the sensitivity of both tests decreases as LF intensity and prevalence decline.

Entomologic en·to·mol·o·gy  
n.
The scientific study of insects.



ento·mo·log
 monitoring provides an alternative method of measuring the impact of MDA on transmission. Although it circumvents the human cost of repeated blood collection and provides a direct, real-time measure of potential transmission, continuous mosquito collection and dissection were more costly and labor-intensive than other monitoring methods that we used. Conducting intermittent rather than continuous collections may be an alternative approach.

The limitations of these monitoring tools highlight the need for more sensitive, standardized tools to help programs define MDA endpoints and to conduct surveillance. Antibody responses may develop before patent infection and serve as a cumulative measure of filarial exposure and a proxy for transmission (12). In Egypt, antibody surveys of children beginning school were used to monitor for incident exposure, indicative of ongoing transmission (3). Additional studies are needed to validate antibody tests and to analyze the relationship between antibody prevalence and transmission intensity.

In summary, MDA-based LF programs, including that in Leogane, lead to dramatic declines in filarial infection in humans and mosquitoes after several annual rounds of MDA (2,3,13 15). The outcomes of the Leogane project and others that have completed 5 rounds of MDA strongly suggest that the duration of treatment is related to the baseline transmission intensity and infection prevalence. Several issues--population migration, systematic noncompliance, and sentinel site bias--have emerged as variables that complicate decision making. Investigating their effect on infection and transmission in an operational context is critical.

Acknowledgments

We thank Jack Guy Lafontant and the staff of the Leogane demonstration project at Hopital Ste. Croix, Leogane, Haiti, for their support and the residents of the sentinel sites who volunteered for testing over the years.

This article is dedicated to the memory of Jean Joseph Dorvil, a program administrator who was killed in Port-au-Prince in December 2004.

This project was funded by the CDC Emerging Infectious Diseases funds and by a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Melinda French Gates (born Melinda Ann French on August 15, 1964) is a former unit manager for several Microsoft products: Publisher, Microsoft Bob, Encarta, and Expedia. In 1994, she married Bill Gates, founder, chairman, and former chief software architect of Microsoft.  Foundation awarded to the University of Notre Dame, Indiana Notre Dame, Indiana is an unincorporated community northeast of South Bend in St. Joseph County, Indiana; it includes the campuses of three colleges: the University of Notre Dame, Saint Mary's College, and Holy Cross College. .

Ms Grady joined the Division of Parasitic Diseases, CDC, in Atlanta, Georgia, as an Emerging Infectious Diseases Training Fellow. She is attending the University of Washington School of Medicine The University of Washington School of Medicine (UWSOM) is a public medical school located in Seattle, Washington. It is a graduate school affiliated with the University of Washington, and is the only medical school in the states of Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, and Idaho. .

References

(1.) Ottesen EA, Duke BO, Karam M, Behbehani K. Strategies and tools for the control/elimination of lymphatic filariasis. Bull World Health Organ. 1997;75:491-503.

(2.) World Health Organization. Global programme to eliminate lymphatic filariasis: progress report on mass drug administrations in 2005. Wkly Epidemiol Rec. 2006;81:221-32.

(3.) Ramzy RMR RMR Resting Metabolic Rate
RMR Registered Merit Reporter
RMR Reliability Must-Run (electric generation plant's status to maintain grid voltage/reliability)
RMR Recurring Monthly Revenue (finance) 
, El Setouhy M, Helmy H, Ahmed ES, Abd Elaziz KM, Farid HA, et al. Effect of yearly mass drug administration with diethylcarbamazine and albendazole on bancroftian filariasis bancroftian filariasis Tropical medicine Infection with Wuchereria bancrofti, which causes elephantiasis, hydrocele, and regional economic loss Treatment Diethylcarbamazine, ivermectin, albendazole. See Diethylcarbamazine, Filariasis.  in Egypt: a comprehensive assessment. Lancet. 2006;367:992-9.

(4.) Mohammed KA, Molyneux DH, Albonico M, Rio F. Progress toward eliminating lymphatic filariasis in Zanzibar: a model programme. Trends Parasitol. 2006;22:340-4.

(5.) de Rochars MB, Kanjilal S, Direny AN, Radday J, Lafontant JG, Mathieu E, et al. The Leogane, Haiti demonstration project: decreased microfilaremia and program costs after three years of mass drug administration. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2005;73:888-94.

(6.) Goodman DS, Orelus JN, Roberts JM, Laramie PJ, Streit T. PCR PCR polymerase chain reaction.

PCR
abbr.
polymerase chain reaction


Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) 
 and mosquito dissection as tools to monitor filarial infection following mass treatment. Filaria filaria /fi·la·ria/ (fi-lar´e-ah) pl. fila´riae   [L.] a nematode worm of the superfamily Filarioidea.fila´rial

Filaria
n.
 Journal [serial online]. 2003 July; 2(11). Available from http://www.filariajournal.com/content/2/1/11

(7.) Mathieu E, Deming M, Lammie PJ, McLaughlin SI, Beach MJ, Dcodat DJ, et al. Comparison of methods for estimating drug coverage for filariasis elimination, Leogane Commune, Haiti. Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg. 2003;97:501-5.

(8.) Mathieu E, Direny A, Beau de Rochars M, Streit T, Addiss DG, Laramie PJ. Participation in three consecutive mass drug administrations in Leogane, Haiti. Trop Med Int Health. 2006;11:862-8.

(9.) McLaughlin SI, Radday J, Michel MC, Addiss DG, Beach MJ, Lammie PJ, el al. Frequency, severity, and costs of adverse reactions adverse reactions,
n.pl unfavorable reactions resulting from administration of a local anesthetic; responsible factors include the drug used, concentration, and route of administration.
 following mass treatment for lymphatic filariasis using diethylcarbamazine and albendazole in Leogane, Haiti, 2000. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2003;68:568-73.

(10.) Stolk WA, Swaminathan S, van Oortmarssen GJ, Das PK, Habbema JD. Prospects for elimination of bancroftian filariasis by mass drug treatment in Pondicherry, India: a simulation study. J Infect Dis. 2003;188:1371-81.

(11.) Michael E, Malecela-Lazaro MN, Simonsen PE, Pedersen EM, Barker G, Kumar A, et al. Mathematical modeling and the control of lymphatic filariasis. Lancet Infect Dis. 2004;4:223-33.

(12.) Lammie P, Weil G, Noordin R, Kaliraj P, Steel C, Goodman D, et al. Recombinant antigen-based antibody assays for the diagnosis and surveillance of lymphatic filariasis--a multicenter trial. Filaria Journal [serial online]. 2004;3(9). Available from http://www.filariajournal.com/content/3/1/9

(13.) Bockarie MJ, Tisch DJ, Kastens W, Alexander ND, Dimber Z, Bockarie F, et al. Mass treatment to eliminate filariasis in Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea (păp`ə, –y . N Engl J Med. 2002;347:1841 8.

(14.) Ramaiah KD, Das PK, Vanamail P, Pant SP. The impact of six rounds of single-dose mass administration of diethylcarbamazine or ivermectin ivermectin

an avermectin with broad activity against many helminths and arthropods. A broad-spectrum anthelmintic, acaricide and insecticide, used orally, subcutaneously and as a pour-on.
 on the transmission of Wuchereria bancrofti Wuchereria ban·crof·ti
n.
A parasitic nematode that is transmitted to humans by mosquitoes and is the causative agent of elephantiasis.
 by Culex quinquefasciatus and its implications for lymphatic filariasis elimination programmes. Trop Med Int Health. 2003;8:1082-92.

(15.) Richards FO Jr, Pam DD, Kal A, Gerlong GY, Onyeka J, Sambo Y, et al. Significant decrease in the prevalence of Wuchereria bancrofti infection in anopheline anopheline

pertaining to the anopheles genus of mosquitoes.
 mosquitoes following the addition of albendazole to annual ivermectin-based, mass treatments in Nigeria. Ann Trop Med Parasitol. 2005;99:155-64.

Address for correspondence: Patrick J. Laramie, Division of Parasitic Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 4770 Buford Hwy NE, Mailstop F 13, Bldg 23, Room 1021, Atlanta, GA 30341, USA; email: plammie@cdc.hhs.gov

Caroline A. Grady, * Madsen Beau de Rochars, ([dagger]) Abdel N. Direny, ([dagger]) Jean Nicolas Orelus, ([dagger]) Joyanna Wendt, * Jeanne Radday, * Els Mathieu, * Jacquelin M. Roberts, * Thomas G. Streit, ([double dagger]) David G. Addiss, * and Patrick J. Lammie *

* Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA; ([dagger]) Hopital Ste. Croix, Leogane, Haiti; and ([double dagger]) University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana, USA
Table. Drug coverage for Leogane Commune, Haiti *

                                       2000      2001      2002

No. treated ([dagger])                74,000    55,000    94,000
Reported coverage ([double dagger])     69%       50%      84%
Surveyed coverage ([section])           71%       NA       79%
Adverse events ([paragraph])            23%       16%       9%

                                       2003      2004

No. treated ([dagger])                102,000   122,000
Reported coverage ([double dagger])     89%      104%
Surveyed coverage ([section])           NA        NA
Adverse events ([paragraph])            8%        3%

* NA, not available

([dagger]) Based on tally counts from distribution posts.

([double dagger]) Using 108,000 as the total population of Leogane
determined by cluster survey in 2000 (7), adjusted for annual
population growth. International Data Base (IDB): available from
http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/idbprint.html

([section]) Published data (7,8).

([paragraph]) Based on the number of persons who reported to
distribution posts with reports adverse events as a percentage of the
reported coverage. See reference (9) for a more detailed discussion of
adverse events associated with the first round of mass drug
administration.
COPYRIGHT 2007 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:DISPATCHES
Author:Lammie, Patrick J.
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Geographic Code:5HAIT
Date:Apr 1, 2007
Words:2179
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