Predicted Impact of Mass Drug Administration on the Development of Protective Immunity against Schistosoma haematobium
Authored by Kate M Mitchell, Francisca Mutapi, Takafira Mduluza, Nicholas Midzi, Nicholas J Savill, Mark E J Woolhouse
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003059
Sponsors:
Wellcome Trust
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Previous studies suggest that protective immunity against Schistosoma
haematobium is primarily stimulated by antigens from dying worms.
Praziquantel treatment kills adult worms, boosting antigen exposure and
protective antibody levels. Current schistosomiasis control efforts use
repeated mass drug administration (MDA) of praziquantel to reduce
morbidity, and may also reduce transmission. The long-term impact of MDA
upon protective immunity, and subsequent effects on infection dynamics, are not known. A stochastic individual-based model describing levels of
S. haematobium worm burden, egg output and protective parasite-specific
antibody, which has previously been fitted to cross-sectional and
short-term post-treatment egg count and antibody patterns, was used to
predict dynamics of measured egg output and antibody during and after a
5-year MDA campaign. Different treatment schedules based on current
World Health Organisation recommendations as well as different
assumptions about reductions in transmission were investigated. We found
that antibody levels were initially boosted by MDA, but declined below
pre-intervention levels during or after MDA if protective immunity was
short-lived. Following cessation of MDA, our models predicted that
measured egg counts could sometimes overshoot pre-intervention levels, even if MDA had had no effect on transmission. With no reduction in
transmission, this overshoot occurred if protective immunity was
short-lived. This implies that disease burden may temporarily increase
following discontinuation of treatment, even in the absence of any
reduction in the overall transmission rate. If MDA was additionally
assumed to reduce transmission, a larger overshoot was seen across a
wide range of parameter combinations, including those with longer-lived
protective immunity. MDA may reduce population levels of immunity to
urogenital schistosomiasis in the long-term (3-10 years), particularly
if transmission is reduced. If MDA is stopped while S. haematobium is
still being transmitted, large rebounds (up to a doubling) in egg counts
could occur.
Tags
Infection
exposure
Resistance
Age
Soil-transmitted helminthiasis
Adult worm antigens
Ige responses
Mansoni
Praziquantel
Reinfection