Abstract

Soil-transmitted helminthes including hookworm infections result in a major disease burden worldwide. Periodic chemotherapy treatments with anthelminthic drugs remain major intervention strategy in highly endemic areas and currently there is no approved human vaccine. We developed a model to study the spread of the hookworm infection in the population level having a variety of parasite development stages. We investigated long-term effectiveness of selective and mass chemotherapy, scenarios in which the therapy becomes less effective, and is interrupted. We analyzed the mathematical model, which includes determining the basic reproductive number and steady states, defining model initial conditions, proving positiveness and boundedness of solutions, local and global stability of the disease-free and endemic steady states, and uniform persistence of the system. We fitted our model using field data from hookworm control programs in endemic areas in China and Zimbabwe. The model provided accurate predictions of disease prevalence for all considered locations for multiple years of utilizing deworming programs. We demonstrated that administration of the deworming therapy is an effective method in terms of controlling the hookworm infection. Nevertheless, the chemotherapy programs do not eradicate the disease in the villages and the infection occurrence promptly increases once the program is interrupted, thus ultimately leading to the pre-treatment levels. Our modeling results suggest that the deworming programs should be maintained at least once per year to control the infection.

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