Effects of 5 rounds of mass drug administration with diethylcarbamazine and albendazole on filaria-specific IgG4 titers in urine: 6-year follow-up study in Sri Lanka.
Makoto Itoh, Mirani V Weerasooriya, Thishan C Yahathugoda, Hidekazu Takagi, Wilfred A Samarawickrema, Fumiaki Nagaoka, Eisaku Kimura
Index: Parasitol. Int. 60(4) , 393-7, (2011)
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Abstract
ELISA for filaria-specific IgG4 in urine (urine ELISA) was applied to children in 7 schools in Sri Lanka, before and after 5 rounds of annual mass drug administration (MDA). The pre-treatment IgG4 prevalence in 2002 was 3.20%, which decreased to 0.91% in 2003 after the first MDA (P<0.001), and finally to 0.36% in 2007 after the 5th MDA. Among 5-10 year-old children, the prevalence decreased from 3.37% in 2002 to 0.51% in 2003 (P=0.009). A pattern of IgG4 titer distribution according to age and its yearly change could also provide useful information in drug efficacy analysis. In 2008, new samples from eleven 2006/07 urine ELISA-positive students and their family members (total n=56) were examined by ICT antigen test, microfilaria test, and urine ELISA. No infection was confirmed among them. Urine ELISA will be useful in monitoring elimination/resurgence in a post-MDA low endemic situation.Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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