Abstract

BackgroundDespite the progress achieved in scaling-up mass drug administration (MDA) for lymphatic filariasis (LF) in Ghana, communities with persistent LF still exist even after 10 years of community treatment. To understand the reasons for persistence, we conducted a study to assess the status of disease elimination and understand the adherence to interventions including MDA and insecticide treated nets.Methodology and principal findingsWe conducted a parasitological and epidemiological cross-sectional study in adults from eight villages still under MDA in the Northern Region savannah and the coastal Western Region of the country. Prevalence of filarial antigen ranged 0 to 32.4% and in five villages the prevalence of night blood microfilaria (mf) was above 1%, ranging from 0 to 5.7%. Median mf density was 67 mf/ml (range: 10–3,560). LF antigen positivity was positively associated with male sex but negatively associated with participating in MDA the previous year. Male sex was also associated with a decreased probability of participating in MDA. A stochastic model (TRANSFIL) was used to assess the expected microfilaria prevalence under different MDA coverage scenarios using historical data on one community in the Western Region. In this example, the model simulations suggested that the slow decline in mf prevalence is what we would expect given high baseline prevalence and a high correlation between MDA adherence from year to year, despite high MDA coverage.ConclusionsThere is a need for an integrated quantitative and qualitative research approach to identify the variations in prevalence, associated risk factors and intervention coverage and use levels between and within regions and districts. Such knowledge will help target resources and enhance surveillance to the communities most at risk and to reach the 2020 LF elimination goals in Ghana.

Highlights

  • Lymphatic filariasis (LF) is a mosquito-borne disease caused by the filarial nematodes Wuchereria bancrofti, Brugia malayi and Brugia timori

  • In the African region, where up to 464 million people in 33 countries live in endemic areas [1], LF is caused by W. bancrofti and is most commonly transmitted by mosquitoes of the genus Anopheles and Culex [2]

  • The mainstay of the elimination program is mass drug administration (MDA) of the anthelminthic drugs albendazole and either ivermectin in areas co-endemic for onchocerciasis or diethylcarbamazine. These drugs kill the microfilaria, the juvenile stage which is responsible for the transmission to the mosquito, and repeated annual drug treatment of the at-risk population is expected to reduce the prevalence of infection below a threshold (1% mf prevalence) under which transmission cannot be sustained [4]

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Summary

Introduction

Lymphatic filariasis (LF) is a mosquito-borne disease caused by the filarial nematodes Wuchereria bancrofti, Brugia malayi and Brugia timori. The mainstay of the elimination program is mass drug administration (MDA) of the anthelminthic drugs albendazole and either ivermectin in areas co-endemic for onchocerciasis or diethylcarbamazine. These drugs kill the microfilaria (mf), the juvenile stage which is responsible for the transmission to the mosquito, and repeated annual drug treatment of the at-risk population is expected to reduce the prevalence of infection below a threshold (1% mf prevalence) under which transmission cannot be sustained [4]. Despite the progress achieved in scaling-up mass drug administration (MDA) for lymphatic filariasis (LF) in Ghana, communities with persistent LF still exist even after 10 years of community treatment. To understand the reasons for persistence, we conducted a study to assess the status of disease elimination and understand the adherence to interventions including MDA and insecticide treated nets

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