One round of azithromycin MDA adequate to interrupt transmission in districts with prevalence of trachomatous inflammation-follicular of 5.0-9.9%: Evidence from Malawi

As highly trachoma-endemic countries approach elimination, some districts will have prevalences of trachomatous inflammation-follicular in 1-9-year-olds (TF1-9) of 5.0-9.9%. The World Health Organization (WHO) previously recommended that in such districts, TF prevalence be assessed in each sub-distr...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLoS neglected tropical diseases 2018-06, Vol.12 (6), p.e0006543-e0006543
Hauptverfasser: Kalua, Khumbo, Chisambi, Alvin, Chinyanya, David, Masika, Michael, Bakhtiari, Ana, Willis, Rebecca, Emerson, Paul M, Solomon, Anthony W, Bailey, Robin L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:As highly trachoma-endemic countries approach elimination, some districts will have prevalences of trachomatous inflammation-follicular in 1-9-year-olds (TF1-9) of 5.0-9.9%. The World Health Organization (WHO) previously recommended that in such districts, TF prevalence be assessed in each sub-district (groupings of at least three villages), with three rounds of azithromycin treatment offered to any sub-district in which TF≥10%. Given the large number of endemic districts worldwide and the human and financial resources required to conduct surveys, this recommendation may not be practical. In a group of 8 Malawi districts with baseline TF prevalences of 5.0-9.9%, the Malawi Ministry of Health administered one round of azithromycin mass treatment, to the whole of each district, achieving mean coverage of ~80%. Here, we report impact surveys conducted after that treatment. We undertook population-based trachoma surveys in 18 evaluation units of the 8 treated districts, at least 6 months after the MDA. The standardized training package and survey methodologies of Tropical Data, which conform to WHO recommendations, were used. Each of the 18 evaluation units had a TF1-9 prevalence
ISSN:1935-2735
1935-2727
1935-2735
DOI:10.1371/journal.pntd.0006543