Abstract

BackgroundThe last decade has seen an expansion of national schistosomiasis control programmes in Africa based on large-scale preventative chemotherapy. In many areas this has resulted in considerable reductions in infection and morbidity levels in treated individuals. In this paper, we quantify changes in the force of infection (FOI), defined here as the per (human) host parasite establishment rate, to ascertain the impact on transmission of some of these programmes under the umbrella of the Schistosomiasis Control Initiative (SCI).MethodsA previous model for the transmission dynamics of Schistosoma mansoni was adapted here to S. haematobium. These models were fitted to longitudinal cohort (infection intensity) monitoring and evaluation data. Changes in the FOI following up to three annual rounds of praziquantel were estimated for Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) according to country, baseline endemicity and schistosome species. Since schistosomiasis transmission is known to be highly focal, changes in the FOI at a finer geographical scale (that of sentinel site) were also estimated for S. mansoni in Uganda.ResultsSubstantial and statistically significant reductions in the FOI relative to baseline were recorded in the majority of, but not all, combinations of country, parasite species, and endemicity areas. At the finer geographical scale assessed within Uganda, marked heterogeneity in the magnitude and direction of the relative changes in FOI was observed that would not have been appreciated by a coarser-scale analysis.ConclusionsReductions in the rate at which humans acquire schistosomes have been achieved in many areas of SSA countries assisted by the SCI, while challenges in effectively reducing transmission persist in others. Understanding the underlying heterogeneity in the impact and performance of the control intervention at the level of the transmission site will become increasingly important for programmes transitioning from morbidity reduction to elimination of infection. Such analyses will require a fine-scale approach. The lack of association found between programmatic variables, such as therapeutic treatment coverage (recorded at district level) and changes in FOI (at sentinel site level) is discussed and recommendations are made.

Highlights

  • The last decade has seen an expansion of national schistosomiasis control programmes in Africa based on large-scale preventative chemotherapy

  • Cohort representativeness A comparison between the baseline values of infection intensity and prevalence of heavy infection in those individuals in the longitudinal cohort and those lost to follow-up was conducted using the most extensive datasets, namely the cohorts for S. mansoni in Uganda and for S. haematobium in Burkina Faso (Fig. 3)

  • In Uganda (Fig. 3a and b) the intensity of infection was 29 % higher in those children who were lost to follow-up (301 epg [95 % CIs: 271, 330 egg] vs. 233 epg [95 % CIs: 205, 261], Z = 3.27, p-value = 0.001), driven primarily by a significant difference in the egg counts of high intensity infections (27.2 % higher; 843 epg [95 % CIs: 755, 930 egg] vs.663 epg [95 % CIs: 574, 752 egg], Z = 2.82, p-value = 0.005)

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Summary

Introduction

The last decade has seen an expansion of national schistosomiasis control programmes in Africa based on large-scale preventative chemotherapy. In many areas this has resulted in considerable reductions in infection and morbidity levels in treated individuals. What is not yet clear is the benefit of such large-scale treatment to the wider community via reductions in transmission These reductions will be manifested via a decrease in the force of infection (FOI) which, for macroparasitic infections, is defined as the per capita rate at which a host acquires new infections [3]. Routinely used diagnostic tools cannot identify newly established parasites until they reach patency and reproduce successfully

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