Pathogens (Dec 2020)

Effect of Ivermectin Treatment on the Frequency of Seizures in Persons with Epilepsy Infected with <i>Onchocerca volvulus</i>

  • Alfred Dusabimana,
  • Solomon Tsebeni Wafula,
  • Stephen Jada Raimon,
  • Joseph Nelson Siewe Fodjo,
  • Dan Bhwana,
  • Floribert Tepage,
  • Gasim Abd-Elfarag,
  • An Hotterbeekx,
  • Steven Abrams,
  • Robert Colebunders

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens10010021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. 21

Abstract

Read online

A clinical trial performed in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), among persons with epilepsy (PWE) infected with Onchocerca volvulus treated with anti-seizure medication suggested that ivermectin reduces the seizure frequency. We assessed the effect of ivermectin treatment on seizure frequency in PWE with and without anti-seizure medication in three onchocerciasis endemic areas (Maridi, South Sudan; Aketi, DRC; and Mahenge, Tanzania). Pre- and 3–5 months post-ivermectin microfilariae densities in skin snips and seizure frequency were assessed. After ivermectin, the median (IQR) percentage reduction in seizure frequency in the study sites ranged from 73.4% (26.0–90.0) to 100% (50.0–100.0). A negative binomial mixed model showed that ivermectin significantly reduced the seizure frequency, with a larger decrease in PWE with a high baseline seizure frequency. Mediation analysis showed that ivermectin reduced the seizure frequencies indirectly through reduction in microfilariae densities but also that ivermectin may have a direct anti-seizure effect. However, given the short half-life of ivermectin and the fact that ivermectin does not penetrate the healthy brain, such a direct anti-seizure effect is unlikely. A randomized controlled trial assessing the ivermectin effect in people infected with O. volvulus who are also PWE on a stable anti-seizure regimen may be needed to clarify the causal relationship between ivermectin and seizure frequency.

Keywords