Abstract

The impact of large scale Mass Drug Adminstration (MDA) of ivermectin on active onchocerciasis transmission by Simulium damnosum, which transmits the parasite O. volvulus is of great importance for onchocerciasis control programmes. We investigated in the Mbam river system area, the impact of MDA of ivermectin on entomological indices and also verify if there are river system factors that could have favoured the transmission of onchocerciasis in this area and contribute to the persistence of disease. We compared three independent techniques to detect Onchocerca larvae in blackflies and also analyzed the river system within 9 months post-MDA of ivermectin. Simulium flies were captured before and after 1, 3, 6 and 9months of ivermectin-MDA. The biting rate was determined and 41% of the flies dissected while the rest were grouped into pools of 100 flies for DNA extraction. The extracted DNA was then subjected to O-150 LAMP and real-time PCR for the detection of infection by Onchocerca species using pool screening. The river system was analysed and the water discharge compared between rainy and dry seasons. We used human landing collection method (previously called human bait) to collect 22,274 adult female Simulium flies from Mbam River System. Of this number, 9,134 were dissected while 129 pools constituted for molecular screening. Overall biting and parous rates of 1113 flies/man/day and 24.7%, respectively, were observed. All diagnostic techniques detected similar rates of O. volvulus infection (P = 0.9252) and infectivity (P = 0.4825) at all monitoring time points. Onchocerca ochengi larvae were only detected in 2 of the 129 pools. Analysis of the river drainage revealed two hydroelectric dams constructed on the tributaries of the Mbam river were the key contributing factor to the high-water discharge during both rainy and dry seasons. Results from fly dissection (Microscopy), real-time PCR and LAMP revealed the same trends pre- and post-MDA. The infection rate with animal Onchocerca sp was exceptionally low. The dense river system generate important breeding sites that govern the abundance of Simulium during both dry and rainy seasons.

Highlights

  • Onchocerciasis is a parasitic disease caused by Onchocerca volvulus, transmitted by the bite of an infective female black fly of the genus Simulium [1]

  • We investigated the impact of ivermectin on entomological indices within 9 months following a large-scale Mass Drug Adminstration (MDA) in the Mbam river drainage

  • Dynamics in onchocerciasis transmission in Simulium damnosum flies caught within 9 months following ivermectin (Mectizan) mass drug administration (IVM-MDA)

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Summary

Introduction

Onchocerciasis is a parasitic disease caused by Onchocerca volvulus, transmitted by the bite of an infective female black fly of the genus Simulium [1]. The disease is recognized as the second leading infectious cause of blindness after trachoma [2] and is a major public health concern in many tropical countries [3]. It is one of the neglected tropical diseases with an estimated 21 million people infected and about 99% of them are in Africa [4]. We compared three independent techniques to detect Onchocerca larvae in blackflies and analyzed the river system within 9 months post-MDA of ivermectin

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