Abstract

The long-term effect of 4 strategies for control of bancroftian filariasis using mass diethylcarbamazine (DEC) chemotherapy was assessed and compared in 4 endemic communities in Tanzania over a period of 4 years. The strategies were the standard 12 d treatment (strategy I), semi-annual single dose treatment (strategy II), monthly low dose treatment (strategy III), and DEC-medicated salt treatment (strategy IV). Treatment was given only during the first year. All strategies resulted in considerable reductions in microfilaraemia, with maximum effects occurring 1–2 years after start of treatment. At 2 years, the greatest reductions were seen for strategies III and IV, followed by strategy II and finally strategy I. The overall performance of the 4 strategies evaluated over the 4 years period followed the same sequence. Between the 2 years and 4 years follow-up surveys, a significant increase in microfilarial (mf) burden occurred in all 4 communities, but the mf geometric mean intensities (GMI) remained low. Thus, in individuals who were microfilaraemic before treatment, the rates of microfilaraemia were 66%, 44%, 34% and 43%, and the mf GMIs were 6·8%, 3·3%, 0·5% and 0·7%, of pre-treatment level, 4 years after start of treatment with strategies I, II, III and IV, respectively. Most individuals who developed microfilaraemia between the 2 years and 4 years follow-up surveys had been microfilaraemic before the start of treatment. Hence, the rate of development of microfilaraemia was much higher (18 times on average in the 4 communities) among those who were microfilaraemic before treatment than among those who were amicrofilaraemic. The long-lasting effect of treatment adds a promising potential to the use of mass DEC chemotherapy for the control of bancroftian filariasis.

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