Abstract

The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends continuing azithromycin mass drug administration (MDA) for trachoma until endemic regions drop below 5% prevalence of active trachoma in children aged 1–9 years. Azithromycin targets the ocular strains of Chlamydia trachomatis that cause trachoma. Regions with low prevalence of active trachoma may have little if any ocular chlamydia, and, thus, may not benefit from azithromycin treatment. Understanding what happens to active trachoma and ocular chlamydia prevalence after stopping azithromycin MDA may improve future treatment decisions. We systematically reviewed published evidence for community prevalence of both active trachoma and ocular chlamydia after cessation of azithromycin distribution. We searched electronic databases for all peer-reviewed studies published before May 2020 that included at least 2 post-MDA surveillance surveys of ocular chlamydia and/or the active trachoma marker, trachomatous inflammation–follicular (TF) prevalence. We assessed trends in the prevalence of both indicators over time after stopping azithromycin MDA. Of 140 identified studies, 21 met inclusion criteria and were used for qualitative synthesis. Post-MDA, we found a gradual increase in ocular chlamydia infection prevalence over time, while TF prevalence generally gradually declined. Ocular chlamydia infection may be a better measurement tool compared to TF for detecting trachoma recrudescence in communities after stopping azithromycin MDA. These findings may guide future trachoma treatment and surveillance efforts.

Highlights

  • Trachoma causes an estimated 3% of the world’s blindness, with 84 million active cases as of 2019 [1]

  • A total of 9 studies reported from Tanzania, 6 from Ethiopia, 4 from the Gambia, and 1 each from Australia, Egypt, Mali, and Nepal

  • Pretreatment prevalence of ocular chlamydia infection ranged from 0% to 70.7% and of active trachoma (TF or trachomatous inflammation–follicular (TF)/TI) ranged from 4.9% to 91.6%

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Summary

Introduction

Trachoma causes an estimated 3% of the world’s blindness, with 84 million active cases as of 2019 [1]. The World Health Organization (WHO) Alliance for the Global Elimination of Trachoma by 2020 (GET 2020) recommends continuing annual oral mass azithromycin distribution until affected regions drop below 5% prevalence of active trachoma (trachomatous inflammation–follicular, TF) in children aged 1 to 9 years [1]. These guidelines were developed based on expert consensus rather than empirical data, and understanding whether recrudescence of infection or active trachoma occurs after stopping azithromycin MDA could guide future treatment programming

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