Parasites & Vectors (Mar 2019)

Impact of 19 years of mass drug administration with ivermectin on epilepsy burden in a hyperendemic onchocerciasis area in Cameroon

  • Charlotte Boullé,
  • Alfred K. Njamnshi,
  • Fidèle Dema,
  • Michel K. Mengnjo,
  • Joseph Nelson Siewe Fodjo,
  • Anne-Cécile Zoung-Kanyi Bissek,
  • Patrick Suykerbuyk,
  • Cédric G. Lenou-Nanga,
  • Hugues C. Nana-Djeunga,
  • Joseph Kamgno,
  • Cédric B. Chesnais,
  • Michel Boussinesq,
  • Robert Colebunders

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13071-019-3345-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background Surveys conducted in 1991–1992 in the Mbam Valley (Cameroon) revealed that onchocerciasis was highly endemic, with community microfilarial loads (CMFL) > 100 microfilariae/snip in some villages. Also in 1991–1992, a survey of suspected cases of epilepsy (SCE) found 746 SCE using a questionnaire administered to individuals identified by key informants, with prevalences reaching 13.6% in some communities. From 1998, annual community-directed treatment with ivermectin (CDTI) was implemented to control onchocerciasis. In 2017, a door-to-door household survey was conducted in three of the villages visited in 1991–1992, using a standardized 5-item epilepsy screening questionnaire. Results In 2017, a total of 2286 individuals living in 324 households were screened (582 in Bayomen, 553 in Ngongol and 1151 in Nyamongo) and 112 SCE were identified (4.9%). Neurologists examined 92 of these SCE and confirmed the diagnosis of epilepsy for 81 of them (3.5%). Between the surveys in 1991–1992 and 2017, the prevalence of SCE decreased from 13.6% to 2.5% in Bayomen (P = 0.001), from 8.7% to 6.6% in Ngongol (P = 0.205) and from 6.4% to 5.4% in Nyamongo (P = 0.282). The median age of SCE shifted from 20 (IQR: 12–23) to 29 years (IQR: 18–33; P = 0.018) in Bayomen, from 16 (IQR: 12–21) to 26 years (IQR: 21–39; P < 0.001) in Ngongol and from 16 (IQR: 13–19) to 24 years (IQR: 19–32; P < 0.001) in Nyamongo. The proportions of SCE aged < 10, 10–19, 20–29 and ≥ 30 years shifted from 9.5, 58.3, 25.0 and 7.1% in 1991–1992 to 2.7, 20.5, 39.3 and 37.5% in 2017, respectively. Conclusions SCE prevalence decreased overall between 1991–1992 and 2017. The age shift observed is probably due to a decrease in the number of new cases of epilepsy resulting from the dramatic reduction of Onchocerca volvulus transmission after 19 years of CDTI.

Keywords