4.5 Article

An Integrated District Mapping Strategy for Loiasis to Enable Safe Mass Treatment for Onchocerciasis in Gabon

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE
Volume 106, Issue 2, Pages 732-739

Publisher

AMER SOC TROP MED & HYGIENE
DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.21-0799

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Coalition for Operational Research on Neglected Tropical Diseases (COR-NTD) - Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  2. British government
  3. United States Agency for International Development

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The lack of a WHO-recommended strategy for onchocerciasis treatment in areas co-endemic with loiasis hinders the global elimination of onchocerciasis. A pilot integrated mapping strategy in Gabon, using new loiasis diagnostics and risk prediction tools, demonstrated the possibility of safe mass treatment decisions. This study provided valuable epidemiologic data and insights into the performance of diagnostics and the feasibility of an integrated mapping approach.
The lack of a WHO-recommended strategy for onchocerciasis treatment with ivermectin in hypo-endemic areas co-endemic with loiasis is an impediment to global onchocerciasis elimination. New loiasis diagnostics (LoaScope; Loa antibody rapid test) and risk prediction tools may enable safe mass treatment decisions in co-endemic areas. In 2017-2018, an integrated mapping strategy for onchocerciasis, lymphatic filariasis (LF), and loiasis, aimed at enabling safe ivermectin treatment decisions, was piloted in Gabon. Three ivermectin-naive departments suspected to be hypoendemic were selected and up to 100 adults per village across 30 villages in each of the three departments underwent testing for indicators of onchocerciasis, LF, and loiasis. An additional 67 communities in five adjoining departments were tested for loiasis to extend the prevalence and intensity predictions and possibly expand the boundaries of areas deemed safe for ivermectin treatment. Integrated testing in the three departments revealed within-department heterogeneity for all the three diseases, highlighting the value of a mapping approach that relies on cluster-based sampling rather than sentinel sites. These results suggest that safe mass treatment of onchocerciasis may be possible at the subdepartment level, even in departments where loiasis is present. Beyond valuable epidemiologic data, the study generated insight into the performance of various diagnostics and the feasibility of an integrated mapping approach utilizing new diagnostic and modeling tools. Further research should explore how programs can combine these diagnostic and risk prediction tools into a feasible programmatic strategy to enable safe treatment decisions where loiasis and onchocerciasis are co-endemic.

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