Abstract

Two treatments with praziquantel (PZQ) 40 mg/kg, 40 d apart, were given to individuals in a recently established (< 6 years) Schistosoma mansoni focus in the Senegal River Basin (SKB). Efficacy of treatment was evaluated 4 weeks after each treatment. Among 130 individuals who provided stool samples on days 0, 118 and 153 and were treated on days 85 and 125, 113 (87%) were infected with S. mansoni before treatment. The overall geometric mean faecal egg count of the infected individuals was 478 eggs/g. Four weeks after the first treatment (day 118), the overall cure rate was only 42·5% and the overall reduction in intensity of infection was 70·7%. However, 4 weeks after the second treatment (day 153), the overall cure rate rose to 76·1% and the overall reduction in intensity was 88·1%. The greatest increase in cure rate between the 2 treatments was in those individuals who were initially the most heavily infected (> 1000 eggs/g). There was no apparent difference in cure rate between younger (< 20 years) and older individuals (> 20 years). No evidence for the existence of a PZQ tolerant strain of S. mansoni was found. Two treatments of PZQ 40 mg/kg, 40 d apart, were sufficient to give an adequate cure rate and high reductions in the intensity of infection. As there was insufficient time for reinfection between treatment and follow-up to result in egg production, the low cure rate observed after one treatment was probably the result of a combination of high infection intensity and the maturation of pre-existing prepatent S. mansoni infections.

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