Abstract

BackgroundSchistosoma mansoni is a parasite of profound medical importance. Current control focusses on mass praziquantel (PZQ) treatment of populations in endemic areas, termed Preventative Chemotherapy (PC). Large-scale PC programmes exert prolonged selection pressures on parasites with the potential for, direct and/or indirect, emergence of drug resistance. Molecular methods can help monitor genetic changes of schistosome populations over time and in response to drug treatment, as well as estimate adult worm burdens through parentage analysis. Furthermore, methods such as in vitro drug sensitivity assays help phenotype in vivo parasite genotypic drug efficacy.MethodsWe conducted combined in vitro PZQ efficacy testing with population genetic analyses of S. mansoni collected from children from two schools in 2010, five years after the introduction of a National Control Programme. Children at one school had received four annual PZQ treatments and the other school had received two mass treatments in total. We compared genetic differentiation, indices of genetic diversity, and estimated adult worm burden from parasites collected in 2010 with samples collected in 2005 (before the control programme began) and in 2006 (six months after the first PZQ treatment). Using 2010 larval samples, we also compared the genetic similarity of those with high and low in vitro sensitivity to PZQ.ResultsWe demonstrated that there were individual parasites with reduced PZQ susceptibility in the 2010 collections, as evidenced by our in vitro larval behavioural phenotypic assay. There was no evidence, however, that miracidia showing phenotypically reduced susceptibility clustered together genetically. Molecular analysis also demonstrated a significant reduction of adult worm load over time, despite little evidence of reduction in parasite infection intensity, as measured by egg output. Genetic diversity of infections did not reduce over time, despite changes in the genetic composition of the parasite populations.ConclusionsGenotypic and phenotypic monitoring did not indicate a selective sweep, as may be expected if PZQ treatment was selecting a small number of related “resistant” parasites, but there was evidence of genetic changes at the population level over time. Genetic data were used to estimate adult worm burdens, which unlike parasite infection intensity, showed reductions over time, suggesting the relaxation of negative density-dependent constraints on parasite fecundity with PZQ treatment. We thereby demonstrated that density-dependence in schistosome populations may complicate evaluation and monitoring of control programmes.

Highlights

  • Schistosoma mansoni is a parasite of profound medical importance

  • Genotypic and phenotypic monitoring did not indicate a selective sweep, as may be expected if PZQ treatment was selecting a small number of related “resistant” parasites, but there was evidence of genetic changes at the population level over time

  • This study revisited two schools in the Lake Victoria area of Tanzania five years after the introduction of a National Control Programme to conduct follow-up studies of the epidemiology and population genetics of S. mansoni populations that had been investigated before treatment began, and six months after, the first school-based Preventative Chemotherapy (PC) treatment [13]

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Summary

Introduction

Schistosoma mansoni is a parasite of profound medical importance. Current control focusses on mass praziquantel (PZQ) treatment of populations in endemic areas, termed Preventative Chemotherapy (PC). Commitments such as the development of a World Health Organization (WHO) Roadmap for NTD implementation [6], the inclusion of NTD control in the sustainable development goals and large scale PZQ drug donations and in particular the promise by Merck KGaA to donate 250 million PZQ tablets per year from 2016 [3], have all aided the continued scaling up of such programmes, with the promise of an agenda for elimination of schistosomiasis as a public health problem in some areas [6] The implementation of such largescale preventative chemotherapy, is likely to be exerting strong and prolonged evolutionary selection pressure on the parasites [7]. Such selective pressures will increase as the fraction of the parasite population undergoing chemotherapy increases and refugia decrease [7]

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