Program to eliminate elephantiasis has early success

Researchers from the School of Medicine and Ain Shams University in Egypt found that rates of filarial infection, which can lead to disfiguring elephantiasis, sharply declined in Egypt after five years of annual mass treatments with two drugs.

The results, part of a 20-year global effort to eliminate the parasitic infection that is a leading cause of disability, were published in the March 25 issue of The Lancet.

Gary Weil
Gary Weil

“The parasite’s transmission efficiency is low, so the thinking is that once we get human infection rates below a critical level, remaining infections will die out without further intervention,” said senior author Gary Weil, M.D., professor of medicine and of molecular microbiology. “Our assessments suggest that the Egyptian campaign to eliminate these infections, which was implemented by the Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population, has achieved its goals in most areas of the country.”

Filarial worms are nematodes closely related to the heartworm parasites that infect dogs and cats. Infections with the worms, which are spread by mosquitoes, can lead to lymphatic filariasis, a condition where the worms lodge in lymphatic vessels. This triggers inflammation that blocks the drainage normally provided by the lymphatic system and leads to massive swelling of the legs, known as elephantiasis, and genital deformities, which are called hydroceles.

“In addition to causing disability, the disfigurement created by elephantiasis is often a source of great social stigmatization,” Weil said.

Epidemiologists estimate 120 million people are infected with filarial worms in 83 tropical countries. Of those infected, about 40 million have clinical symptoms. As many as 1.2 billion people are at risk of infection with the parasites, which can live and reproduce for several years inside the human body.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), lymphatic filariasis is a leading cause of chronic disability in the world.

Policymakers at World Health Assembly meetings in 1997 endorsed filariasis as a candidate disease for global elimination for several reasons: the worms that cause the disease are inefficiently transmitted, they are not known to infect any species other than humans and mosquitoes, and they are vulnerable to three drugs: albendazole, ivermectin and DEC (diethylcarbamazine).

“The manufacturers of the first two drugs later generously decided to donate the medicines to the global program,” Weil said. “The third medicine is not free but is very inexpensive.”

The assembly passed a resolution calling for the elimination of filariasis by 2020. The strategy the WHO chose for eliminating the parasite is called mass drug administration (MDA).

“In regions where the parasite is known to be present, you annually give two medications that kill the worms,” Weil said. “With the exception of pregnant women and children under 2 years of age, these drugs are given to everyone in the region without testing each person for the infection.”

Planners estimated that five annual repetitions of the MDA program would be needed to drive parasite infection rates down to levels where the few remaining infections would die off on their own. Egypt became one of the first countries to start a five-year MDA program in 2000, working to reach 2.5 million people in 181 Egyptian localities affected by lymphatic filariasis.

Working in collaboration with colleagues at WUSTL including William D. Shannon, Ph.D., associate professor of biostatistics, and researchers at Ain Shams, Weil developed a plan for assessing the degree to which the Egyptian MDA program was successful. Using several different tests, some of which were developed in Weil’s lab, Egyptian scientists annually assessed infection rates during the MDA program in two villages north of Cairo and two villages south of Cairo. Each village has a population of 3,000- 5,000.

The tests revealed sharply declining infection rates over the course of the MDA program. For example, tests of first-graders for an antibody that reveals prior exposure to the parasite declined from 18.2 percent positive prior to MDA to 0.2 percent positive after the fifth round of MDA. A test for infection in mosquitoes also showed infection rates plummeted after MDA.

Assessment of the Egyptian campaign’s results was funded as a part of the International Collaborations in Infectious Diseases Research (ICIDR) program at the National Institutes of Health.

Weil recently received an ICIDR grant for an added $5 million over five years for a larger program to assess and follow up filariasis elimination in Egypt.

Weil noted that the filariasis elimination program, which is now coordinating MDA treatments in 35 nations, has to confront a diverse array of economic, cultural and logistical obstacles.

“The world faces many challenges in bringing this kind of MDA campaign to the 83 nations where the parasite is present, but this first assessment of a completed five-year MDA program is very encouraging.”