Five-Year Impact of Different Multi-Year MDA Strategies on Childhood S. mansoni–Associated Morbidity: A Combined Analysis from the Schistosomiasis Consortium for Operational Research and Evaluation Cohort Studies in the Lake Victoria Regions

12 Aug 2019
Ye Shen, Ryan E. Wiegand, Annette Olsen,Charles H. King, Nupur Kittur, Sue Binder, Feng Zhang, Christopher C. Whalen, William Evan Secor, Susan P. Montgomery, Pauline N. M. Mwinzi, Pascal Magnussen, Safari Kinung’hi, Carl H. Campbell Jr., and Daniel G. Colley

The WHO recommends mass treatment with praziquantel as the primary approach for Schistosoma mansoni–related morbidity control in endemic populations. The Schistosomiasis Consortium for Operational Research
and Evaluation implemented multi-country, cluster-randomized trials to compare effectiveness of community-wide and school-based treatment (SBT) regimens on prevalence and intensity of schistosomiasis. To assess the impact of two different treatment schedules on S. mansoni–associated morbidity in children, cohort studies were nested within the randomized trials conducted in villages in Kenya and Tanzania having baseline prevalence ³ 25%. Children aged 7–8 years were enrolled at baseline and followed to ages 11–12 years. Infection intensity and odds of infection were reduced both in villages receiving four years of annual community-wide treatment (CWT) and those who received biennial SBT over 4 years. These regimens were also associated with reduced odds of undernutrition and reduced odds of portal vein dilation at follow-up. However, neither hemoglobin levels nor the prevalence of the rare abnormal pattern C liver scores on ultrasound improved. For the combined cohorts, growth stunting worsened in the areas receiving biennial SBT, and maximal oxygen uptake as estimated by fitness testing scores declined under both regimens. After adjusting for imbalance in starting prevalence between study arms, children in villages receiving annual CWT had significantly greater decreases in infection prevalence and intensity than those villages receiving biennial SBT. Although health-related quality-of-life scores improved in both study arms, children in the CWT villages gained significantly more. We conclude that programs using annual CWT are likely to achieve better overall S. mansoni morbidity control than those implementing only biennial SBT.
 

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