Title: Waging War on Tropical Diseases: A Public Health Perspective
1 Waging War on Tropical DiseasesA Public
Health Perspective
- BY
- MARILEE COLE, MD, DTMH
- PROFESSOR, DEPARTMENT OF MEDICINE
- GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL
2 Waging War on Tropical Diseases
- Define tropical diseases
- Highlight recent tropical disease research
efforts - Review current tropical diseases management
3 Waging War on Tropical Diseases
- Define tropical diseases
- Highlight recent tropical disease research
efforts - Review current tropical diseases management
4What is a Tropical Disease?
5Sherry Goldyn, MD, MPH, Ben Levy, MD, Cameroon
05, dont wait to find out!
What is a Tropical Disease?
6What is a Tropical Disease?
- Infection Plus Malnutrition
- Due to Poverty
- In a Warm Climate
7What is a Tropical Disease?
- Infection Plus Malnutrition
- Due to Poverty
- In a Warm Climate
8What are Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD)?
9A Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD)
- Select the answer which is NOT TRUE about
Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD) - 1/6 (1 billion) of world population is infected
by NTD - Most NTD are spread by insects or contaminated
- water or contaminated soil
- Guinea worm (dracunculiasis) has decreased from
3.5 million to 25,000, 98 is now mostly in
Ghana and Sudan. - The 6 most common NTD are soil helminths,
malaria, schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis,
trachoma, leprosy - All NTD cause severe disability and life long
impairment
10A Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD)
- Select the answer which is NOT TRUE about
Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD) - 1/6 (1 billion) of world population is infected
by NTD - Most NTD are spread by insects or contaminated
- water or contaminated soil
- Guinea worm (dracunculiasis) has decreased from
3.5 million to 25,000, 98 is now mostly in
Ghana and Sudan. - The 6 most common NTD are soil helminths,
malaria, schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis,
trachoma, leprosy - All NTD cause severe disability and life long
impairment
11A Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD)
- 1/6 (1 billion) of world population is infected
by NTD - Most NTD are spread by insects or contaminated
- water or contaminated soil
- Guinea worm (dracunculiasis) has decreased from
3.5 million to 25,000, 98 is now mostly in
Ghana and Sudan. - The 6 most common NTD are soil helminths,
schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis, trachoma,
onchocerciasis, and Chagas disease - All NTD cause severe disability and life long
impairment
12What is the World-wide Burden of Tropical
Diseases?
- 13 Neglected
- Tropical Diseases
- Ascariasis
- Hookworm
- Trichuriasis
- Schistosomiasis
- Lymphatic filariasis
- Trachoma
- Onchocerciasis
- Chagas disease
- Leishmaniasis
- African trypanosomiasis
- Buruli ulcer
- Leprosy
- Dracunculiasis
- Tropical Diseases, including malaria and the
thirteen (13) neglected tropical diseases, are
the leading cause of life-years lost to
disability and premature death.
13Disability Adjusted Life Years(DALY)
- DALY YLL YLD
- YLL years of life lost due to
- premature mortality
- YLD years lost due to disability
- for incident cases of the
- health condition
14 Causes of Life-Years Lost to Disability
Premature Death
Disability Adjusted Life Years (millions)
Hotez, NEJM, 2007 357 1018-1027
15WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
-
16Tropical Disease Burden(DALYs in thousands)
Malaria (46,486)
WHO,2004
17Tropical Disease BurdenDALYs vs. Deaths (in
thousands)
Malaria (1,272)
Malaria (46,486)
DEATHS
DALYs
WHO,2004
18(No Transcript)
19How Are We Waging the War on Tropical Diseases?
20 Waging War on Tropical Diseases
- Define tropical diseases
- Highlight recent tropical disease research
efforts - Review current tropical diseases management
21TROPICAL DISEASE RESEARCH (TDR)
Sujoy Tagore, MD, MPH, Cam 06, working in the lab
22TROPICAL DISEASE RESEARCH (TDR)
- Tropical Disease Research (TDR) focuses
- on neglected infectious diseases that
disproportionately affect poor and
marginalized populations - Co-sponsored by the United Nations Childrens
Fund (UNICEF), UN Development Program (UNDP), the
World Bank, and the World Health Organization
(WHO) - Established in 1975
23TROPICAL DISEASE RESEARCH (TDR)
- Basic knowledge
- Improved tools
- Intervention methods
- Improved strategies  Â
24TROPICAL DISEASE RESEARCH (TDR)
- Basic knowledge
- Improved tools
- Intervention methods
- Improved strategies  Â
25Drugs Brought to Registration
- 13/1393 of all new drugs were for tropical
diseases (1975-1995) - TDR developed 50 new tropical diseases drugs in
the last 25 years - TDR played a key role in the development of
ivermectin and DEC for filaria elimination - The Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative
(DNDi) was recently instituted with Gates support
Pecoul, B. Access to essential drugs in poor
countries A lost battle? Journal of the
American Medical Association, 1999, 281(4)
361-367
26New Tropical Diseases Drugs(1975-1995)
Pecoul, B. Access to essential drugs in poor
countries A lost battle? Journal of the
American Medical Association, 1999, 281(4)
361-367
27Kumbo valley during the Hamartan
28(No Transcript)
29 Waging War on Tropical Diseases
- Define tropical diseases
- Highlight recent tropical disease research
efforts - Review current tropical diseases management
30WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
-
31WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
-
Trophozoite (Plasmodium falciparum)
32Number of Malaria Cases and Deaths in 2007?
Anopheles gambiae
33Number of Malaria Cases and Deaths in 2007?
500,000,000 cases/year gt1,000,000 deaths/year
(WHO, 2007)
34P. Knowlesi, a 5th species of malaria, was
previously confined to monkeys
35MALARIA
1998 Goal ½ malaria by 2010
500,000,000 cases/year gt1,000,000 deaths/year
36MALARIA
1998 Goal ½ malaria by 2010
Artemisinin Combination Therapy Rapid
Diagnosis Insecticide Impregnated
Bednets Intermittent Preventive Therapy
500,000,000 cases/year gt1,000,000 deaths/year
37B Artemisinins
- Select the answer which is NOT TRUE
- about Artemisinins
- Artemisinins are less efficacious than quinine in
severe P. falciparum malaria due to evolving
resistance - 2. Artemisinins reduce parasites by 10(4)/ cycle
- Artemisinins have activity against all parts
- of the intraerythrocytic life cycle
- Neurotoxicity has been reported in animals,
- but not humans
- Artemisinin binds iron in malaria pigment to
produce free radicals that damage parasite protein
38B Artemisinins
- Select the answer which is NOT TRUE
- about Artemisinins
- Artemisinins are less efficacious than quinine in
severe P. falciparum malaria due to evolving
resistance - 2. Artemisinins reduce parasites by 10(4)/ cycle
- Artemisinins have activity against all parts
- of the intraerythrocytic life cycle
- Neurotoxicity has been reported in animals,
- but not humans
- Artemisinin binds iron in malaria pigment to
produce free radicals that damage parasite protein
39B Artemisinins
-
- Artemisinins are as efficacious as quinine in
severe P. falciparum malaria. There is no
documentation of clinically significant - artemisinin resistance.
- 2. Artemisinins reduce parasites by 10(4)/ cycle
- Artemisinins have activity against all parts
- of the intraerythrocytic life cycle
- Neurotoxicity has been reported in animals,
- but not humans
- Artemisinin binds iron in malaria pigment to
produce free radicals that damage parasite protein
40MALARIA
Artemisia annua
Artemisinin Combination Therapy
41 Artemisinin Combination Therapy(ACT)
- AS 200 mg AQ 612 mg
- daily x 3 days
- AS 200 mg daily x 3 days
- SP 1500/75 day 1
- AS 200 mg daily x 3 days
- MQ 1 g day 2, .5 g day 3
- Am 20mg / Lu 120 mg bid
- x 3 days
- DP
WHO Malaria Treatment Guidelines, 2006
42MALARIA
Artemisinin Combination Therapy (ACT)
43What Malarious Countries Lack a National ACT
Policy?
Malarious countries with national ACT policies
Artemisinin Combination Therapy (ACT)
44What Malarious Countries Lack a National ACT
Policy?
M
M
M
Malarious countries with NO ACT national policies
M
M
M
M
M
M
Artemisinin Combination Therapy (ACT)
45Fatou Kama, MD, Cam 08, and her Banso
Hospital medical colleagues happily prescribe ACT
for malaria
46MALARIA
1998 Goal ½ malaria by 2010
OptiMAL
Artemisinin Combination Therapy Rapid
Diagnosis Insecticide Impregnated
Bednets Intermittent Preventive Therapy
ParaSightF
47NOW Malaria Rapid Diagnostic Test
- Differentiates P. falciparum from other
Plasmodium circulating antigens in - 15 minutes
- P. f. sensitivity 99.7
- P. f. specificity 99.8
- P. v. sensitivity 93.5
- P. v. specificity 94.2
- FDA approved on 6/26/07
Plasmodium falciparum parasitemia levels gt5,000
(parasites/ul).
48MALARIA
1998 Goal ½ malaria by 2010
OptiMAL
Artemisinin Combination Therapy Rapid
Diagnosis Insecticide Impregnated
Bednets Intermittent Preventive Therapy
ParaSightF
49MALARIA
1998 Goal ½ malaria by 2010
Artemisinin Combination Therapy Rapid
Diagnosis Insecticide Impregnated
Bednets Intermittent Preventive Therapy
50Percent of Insecticide-Treated Bednets Used the
Prior Night
bednets used the prior night
Baume, C. AJTMH, 2007 963-971
51(No Transcript)
52Please Knock Before Entering
Please knock before entering
53Malaria Burden in AfricaMeasuring the Progress
- Increasing levels of malaria morbidity and
mortality estimated, due to deterioration of the
malaria situation during the 1990s - 23/53 countries are now using ACT
- 22/53 countries using home management of malaria
for children - 14/53 countries have 10x increase
insecticide-impregnated bednets
54MALARIA
1998 Goal ½ malaria by 2010
OptiMAL
Artemisinin Combination Therapy Rapid
Diagnosis Insecticide Impregnated
Bednets Intermittent Preventive Therapy
ParaSightF
55Malaria Prophylaxis during Pregnancy
- By
- Amy Sorensen, GT4,
- Marilee Cole, MD, DTMH
- Tom Welty, MD, MPH
2004-2005
56Malaria at Banso Hospital in Kumbo, Cameroon
Plasmodium falciparum Malaria in Adults
- Most Common
- Outpatient Diagnosis
- Second Most Common
- Cause of Inpatient Deaths
-
-
-
(2005)
57 Risk Populations to Malarial Disease
- Children under 5
- Pregnant women
- Visitors, immigrants, refugees
- Sickle cell anemia
- HIV/AIDS
58Complications of Malaria in Pregnancy
- Maternal anemiagt 10,000 maternal deaths per
year, in Africa alone - Intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) from
impaired nutrient transfer - Low birth weight (LBW) babies are the single
greatest risk factor for infant death
59Malaria Prophylaxis during Pregnancy
Fansidar
60Intermittent Preventive Therapy (IPT)
- Sulfadoxine/pyrimethamine
- (Fansidar)
- 500/25 x 3 po stat
- at 24 weeks and 2832 weeks
- of pregnancy
- OR
- if patient entered prenatal care
- after 24 weeks
- Recommended by WHO
-
61Malaria Risk Factors in CBCHB Pregnant Cohort
- 95 Women, nearing or recently post-delivery in
the hospital - 1st or 2nd pregnancy 53
- adolescent 17
- HIV/AIDS gt 7
62Medication Choices in CBCHB Cohort
- 60 of CBCHB Cohort took Fansidar
- 30 took adequate Fansidar dosage/s
- 30 took chloroquine, 7 adequately
- 30 either took malaria prophylaxis too late or
not at all
63Adequacy of Malaria Prophylaxis in CBCHB Cohort
-
- 13 of mothers on adequate dosages of Fansidar
experienced an episode of malaria (a 75
reduction in malaria incidence). - 40 of mothers who took adequate dosages of
chloroquine had an episode of malaria. - 48 of mothers on no malaria prophylaxis
developed malaria.
64Does Timing of Maternal Malaria Alter Infant
Birth Weight?
- Average Infant Birth Weight was 10 lower when
the mother had malaria before 24 weeks - ...and 16 lower when after 24 weeks of
gestation, compared to infants with no maternal
malaria.
65MALARIA
1998 Goal ½ malaria by 2010
OptiMAL
Artemisinin Combination Therapy Rapid
Diagnosis Insecticide Impregnated
Bednets Intermittent Preventive Therapy
ParaSightF
66(No Transcript)
67WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
68WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
Microfilaria (Wuchereria bancrofti)
69(No Transcript)
70Geographic Distribution of Lymphatic Filariasis
71Tropical Disease Burden(DALYs in thousands)
DALYs (thousands)
LF L S AT CD O
WHO,2004
72LYMPHATIC FILARIASIS
Elephantiasis
Culex mosquito
- 5,644,000 DALYs
- Lymphangitis with insufficient drainage
- for years
- Transmitted by Culex or Anopheles mosquitoes
73LYMPHATIC FILARIASIS
Elephantiasis
- What is the treatment
- strategy for countries burdened with
- lymphatic filariasis?
74C Ivermectin
- Select the one correct answer
- Ivermectin therapy in co-endemic areas
- for Onchocerca volvulus and Loa loa
- Eliminates the endosymbiotic Wolbachia bacteria
- Causes nephropathy with high Onchocerca volvulus
microfilaria (mf) load - Eliminates both adult worms
- Causes encephalopathy with high Loa loa mf load
- Eliminates Onchocerca volvulus mf
75C Ivermectin
Loa loa
Onchocerca volvulus
- Select the one correct answer
- Ivermectin therapy in co-endemic areas
- for Onchocerca volvulus and Loa loa
- Eliminates the endosymbiotic Wolbachia bacteria
- Causes nephropathy with high Onchocerca volvulus
microfilaria (mf) load - Eliminates both adult worms
- Causes encephalopathy with high Loa loa mf load
- Eliminates Onchocerca volvulus mf
76C Ivermectin
Loa loa
Onchocerca volvulus
- Ivermectin therapy in co-endemic areas
- for Onchocerca volvulus and Loa loa
- Does not eliminate Wolbachia bacteria
- Does not cause nephropathy with high Onchocerca
volvulus microfilaria (mf) load - Does not eliminate either adult worms
- Causes encephalopathy with high Loa loa mf load
- Impairs release of microfilariae from the gravid
Onchocerca volvulus adult worm
77 Treatment Strategies for Lymphatic Filariasis
- For countries co-endemic for onchocerciasis,
treat with albendazole plus ivermectin yearly to
decrease microfilaria (mf) - Â
ivermectin
albendazole
78 Treatment Strategies for Lymphatic Filariasis
- For countries without onchocerciasis
(River Blindness), treat with albendazole and
DEC yearly to - decrease microfilaria (mf)
- Â
albendazole
DEC
79 Treatment Strategies for Lymphatic Filariasis
- Treat yearly with albendazole plus
- ivermectin (if co-endemic for
- onchocerciasis) or DEC to decrease
- microfilaria (mf) burden
- Â
or
ivermectin
albendazole
DEC
80LYMPHATIC FILARIASIS (LF)
Elephantiasis
- Mass Drug Administration (MDA) treatment goals
are 85 coverage and eradication by 2020 - In Africa, Global Program to Eliminate Lymphatic
Filariasis (PELF) treats 4060
Culex mosquito
81Lymphatic Filariasis Program Status by Region in
2004
82Gopi Manthripragada, MD, and Palak Shah, MD, Cam
07, bring Southeast Asias perspective
to Africas medical challenges
83LYMPHATIC FILARIASIS (LF)
Approved Treatments for Lymphatic Filariasis
Elimination
84(No Transcript)
85WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
86WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
Leishmania amastigote
87LEISHMANIASIS
88D What is the ratio of asymptomatic symptomatic
leishmaniasis?
1. 110 2. 11 3. 101 4. 1001 5. 10001
89D What is the ratio of asymptomatic symptomatic
leishmaniasis?
1. 110 2. 11 3. 101 4. 1001 5. 10001
90LEISHMANIASIS
- 12 million infected
- Transmitted by sandfly
- Asymptomatic symptomatic
- infections, from 101 to 1001
sandfly
91LEISHMANIASIS New and improved tools
- Poor response to 28 day antimony treatment
- --regions of increased antimony
- resistance (India)
- --HIV co-infected
-
- In 2002, TDR fostered the development of
miltefosine for 28d, a new oral drug - for visceral leishmaniasis
-
Kala azar
Sundar, S. Oral Miltefosine for Indian Visceral
Leishmaniasis, NEJM, 2002 347(22) 17391746.
92LEISHMANIASIS New and improved tools
28 Surveillance Centers for Leishmania and HIV
Co-Infections
Kala azar
93LEISHMANIASIS New and improved tools
28 Surveillance Centers for Leishmania and HIV
Co-Infections
34 Countries Report Leishmania and
HIV Co-Infection Worldwide
. . . . . . . . . . .
Kala azar
94Marked Price Reduction of Liposomal Amphotericin
- Price reduced from US 150 ? US 20
- for a 50 mg vial for the treatment of
- visceral and mucosal leishmaniasis
- by Gilead in May, 2007
- Full course at 20 mg/kg now costs
- US 280 for a patient of 35 kg
- Reduced price still too high for
- developing countries treatment programs
95(No Transcript)
96WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
-
97WHO Tropical Diseases
Schistosoma Mansoni egg
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
-
98SCHISTOSOMIASIS
99Geographic Distribution of Schistosomiaisis
200,000,000 infected worldwide
100SchistosomiasisControl Strategy
- 1. What 2 drugs are given to children yearly to
control schistosomiasis? - 2. Goal of treatment?
- What drug delivery system
- is used?
101SchistosomiasisControl Strategy
- 1. Cheaper drugs cost 0.50 per year/per child
for praziquantel and albendazole (for soil
transmitted helminths)
102SchistosomiasisControl Strategy
- 1. Cheaper drugs cost 0.50 per year/per child
for praziquantel and albendazole (for soil
transmitted helminths) - Reduce worm intensity
- 3. Piggy back on the school system for long term
stability
Partners for Parasite Control (PPC), WHO, 2001
103Where Is the Schistosomiaisis Control Initiative
(SCI)?
104Where Is the Schistosomiaisis Control Initiative
(SCI)?
first site
SCI 2006
105Schistosomiaisis Control Initiative (SCI)
- SCI, as a founding partner of the Global Network
for Neglected Tropical Disease Control, expanded
its mission to integrating control or elimination
of seven NTD - By 2007, SCI delivered 40 million praziquantel
treatments against schistosomiasis, and even more
albendazole doses, plus assisted - 6 countries to establish national control
programs
106A Cautionary Note
- The recent proposal to combine albendazole,
ivermectin, and praziquantel at a low dose in a
single tablet and to distribute it to virtually
all school-age children in the developing world
risk the emergence of Antihelminthic Resistance. - Some experts judge the risk to be insignificant,
but veterinary experiences dictate otherwise. - The recently published reports on Antihelminthic
Resistance in human helminths must thus be taken
seriously and examined critically.
Geerts, S. Drug Resistance in Human Helminths
Current Situation and Lessons from Livestock,
Clinical Microbiology Reviews, April, 2000 13
(2) 207-222.
107Dr. Susan Kim, Cam 08, and her Cameroon medical
colleague are pleased to take this 8 year old
warning seriously.
108(No Transcript)
109WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
-
110WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
-
Trypomastigote (Trypanosoma brucei)
111AFRICAN TRYPANOSOMIASIS
- 100,000 Africans infected
- Much antigenic drift
- East African variant, stage II, treated with
arsenical - Tsetse fly attracted to motion, black and blue
112AFRICAN TRYPANOSOMIASIS
- 3 Epidemics 1896,
- 1920, 1970
- Prevalence in some
- villages in Angola,
- DRC, S. Sudan
- 2050
- Cameroon is an
- endemic area
- Control through
- surveillance and
- networks for treatment
113Screening and Cases of African Trypanosomiasis
114Screening and Cases of African Trypanosomiasis
- From 1998 to 2004, with reinforced surveillance,
the number of new cases throughout the continent
fell from 37,991 to 17, 616 - In 2005, major outbreaks have been observed in
Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and
Sudan - The estimated number of cases is currently
between 50,000 and 70,000
115Dr. Jessica Rosen, Cam 06, and Dr. Francine
Tchintseme agree that strong surveillance is
required to control African trypanosomiasis
116(No Transcript)
117WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
-
118CHAGAS DISEASE
Reduviid bug
- Disease of poverty
- and poor housing
- 70 infected for life
- 30 chronic disease
- 10 die
Trypanosoma cruzi
119CHAGAS DISEASE
Trypanosoma cruzi
Reduviid bug
- Treat early acute disease with nifurtimox x
90-120 d - Treatment no benefit in chronic late disease
- Southern Cone houses sprayed yearly
120 Waging War on Tropical Diseases
- Define tropical diseases
- Highlight recent tropical disease research
efforts - Review current tropical diseases management
121Effect of Hurricane Isidore on Triatoma
dimidiata Distribution and Chagas Disease
Transmission Risk in the Yucatan Peninsula of
Mexico
Yucatan Peninsula
Triatoma dimidiata
AJTMH, 2005, 73(6) 1019-1025
122Maps of T. dimidiata Domestic Abundance Before
and After Hurricane Isidore
Collected bugs village (for Jan-Mar
interpolated for the entire Yucatán
Peninsula)
Sept., 2002
AJTMH, 2005, 73(6) 1019-1025
123Collections of T. dimidiata Before and After
Hurricane Isidore
P O S T - H U R R I C A N E
P R E - H U R R I C A N E
P R E - H U R R I C A N E
Plt0.05
Plt0.05
AJTMH, 2005, 73(6) 1019-1025
124(No Transcript)
125WHO Tropical Diseases
- Malaria
- Lymphatic Filariasis
- Leishmaniasis
- Schistosomiasis
- African Trypanosomiasis
- Chagas Disease
- Onchocerciasis
-
126ONCHOCERCIASIS or River Blindness
127ONCHOCERCIASIS or River Blindness
- Simulium damnosum needs running water to reproduce
Black fly
128ONCHOCERCIASIS or River Blindness
Nodules over big joints
Chronic sclerosing keratitis
Leopard skin
Onchocerca volvulus
129O n c h o c e r c i a s i s needs to be
treated with intermittent ivermectin for the
12--15 year duration of the life of the adult
worm to prevent production of microfilaria which
cause blindness.
130ONCHOCERCIASIS or River Blindness
- 1974 OCP
- 30M in 11 countries
- 600,000 cases of blindness prevented
ivermectin
The wide-ranging benefits of this achievement
include 600 000 cases of blindness prevented, 18
million children born in now-controlled areas
spared from the risk of river blindness and 25
million hectares of land safe for cultivation and
resettlement. OCP clearly demonstrated the
important role of partnership in health and
socioeconomic development in remote and neglected
areas.
131ONCHOCERCIASIS or River Blindness
- 1974 OCP 30M in 11 countries
- 1995 APOC 34/90M in 19 countries
ivermectin
132ONCHOCERCIASIS
-
- Improved strategies
- Development of strategies for sustainable drug
delivery post Onchocerciasis Control Program
(OCP) with insecticide and ivermectin,
- and African Program for Onchocerciasis
Control (APOC) with ivermectin -
133 Waging War on Tropical Diseases
- Define tropical diseases
- Highlight recent tropical disease research
efforts - Review current tropical diseases management
134How Are We Waging the War on Tropical Diseases?
135Eliminating Tropical Diseases Takes the
Combined Efforts of Drs. Kim, Kama, Arega, and
Sarin, Cam 08
136P. S.
137Nations with Five, Six, or Seven Neglected
Tropical Diseases to Be Targeted for Integrated
Preventive Chemotherapy
Hotez P et al. N Engl J Med 20073571018-1027
138(No Transcript)
139(No Transcript)
140Hotez P et al. N Engl J Med 20073571018-1027
141General Guidelines for Preventive Chemotherapy
for the Seven Most Prevalent Neglected Tropical
Diseases
Hotez P et al. N Engl J Med 20073571018-1027