Predisposition to soil-transmitted helminth reinfection after four rounds of mass drug administration: results from a longitudinal cohort in the Geshiyaro project, a transmission elimination feasibility study in the Wolaita zone of southern Ethiopia

Author:

Rayment Gomez Santiago1ORCID,Maddren Rosie1,Liyew Ewnetu Firdawek2,Chernet Melkie2,Anjulo Ufaysa3,Tamiru Adugna3,Mengitsu Birhan1,Forbes Kathryn1,Collyer Benjamin1,Salasibew Mihretab4,Anderson Roy1

Affiliation:

1. London Centre for Neglected Tropical Disease Research, Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Faculty of Medicine, St Marys Campus, Imperial College London , London W2 1NY, UK

2. Bacterial, Parasitic and Zoonotic Disease Research Directorate, Ethiopian Public Health Institute , Addis Ababa, Ayat Zone 8, Ethiopia

3. Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Core Process, Ministry of Health , Wolaita, Ethiopia

4. Children's Investment fund Foundation , London W1S 2FT, UK

Abstract

ABSTRACT Background Current WHO strategies for reaching soil-transmitted helminths (STH) elimination as a public health problem excludes treating certain adult populations in endemic areas, creating infection reservoirs that drive ‘bounce back’ of STH infection to pretreatment levels post-mass drug administration (MDA). Predisposition is a widespread, but poorly understood phenomena among helminth infections where individuals are predisposed to reinfection after repeated treatments. Methods This analysis uses Geshiyaro project data, an STH control programme exploring transmission interruption by community-wide MDA and enhanced water, sanitation and hygiene during 2019–2023. Parasitological survey data from longitudinal cohorts are analysed using Kendall's Tau-b rank correlation to assess the evidence for predisposition to light or heavy infection between four consecutive rounds of MDA. Results Correlation analyses revealed the strongest evidence for predisposition to heavy or light Ascaris lumbricoides infection was between survey 1 and 2 (Tau-b 0.29; p<0.001). Overall patterns were not observed for Trichuris trichiura or hookworm infections, however, some significant and notable correlations were recorded for some stratifications and time points. Conclusions Evidence for predisposition in endemic settings in southern Ethiopia with low STH prevalence suggests that more targeted approaches to MDA in those predisposed to infection may be a sensible control strategy if cheap, point of care diagnostics are available.

Funder

Children's Investment Fund Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine,Parasitology

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