4.8 Article

Lymphatic filariasis and onchocerciasis

Journal

LANCET
Volume 376, Issue 9747, Pages 1175-1185

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(10)60586-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  2. Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine
  3. EU
  4. Volkswagen Foundation
  5. DFG (German Research Foundation)
  6. UK Department for International Development

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Lymphatic filariasis and onchocerciasis are parasitic helminth diseases that constitute a serious public health issue in tropical regions. The filarial nematodes that cause these diseases are transmitted by blood-feeding insects and produce chronic and long-term infection through suppression of host immunity. Disease pathogenesis is linked to host inflammation invoked by the death of the parasite, causing hydrocoele, lymphoedema, and elephantiasis in lymphatic filariasis, and skin disease and blindness in onchocerciasis. Most filarial species that infect people co-exist in mutualistic symbiosis with Wolbachia bacteria, which are essential for growth, development, and survival of their nematode hosts. These endosymbionts contribute to inflammatory disease pathogenesis and are a target for doxycycline therapy, which delivers macrofilaricidal activity, improves pathological outcomes, and is effective as monotherapy. Drugs to treat filariasis include diethylcarbamazine, ivermectin, and albendazole, which are used mostly in combination to reduce microfilariae in blood (lymphatic filariasis) and skin (onchocerciasis). Global programmes for control and elimination have been developed to provide sustained delivery of drugs to affected communities to interrupt transmission of disease and ultimately eliminate this burden on public health.

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