Longitudinal studies of skin microfilaria and antibody conversion rates in children living in an endemic focus of Onchocerciasis in Nigeria

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Abstract

We monitored skin microfilarial conversion and antibody (serum) conversion rates to Onchocerca volvulus recombinant antigens (OC3.6 and OC9.3) over a 2-year period, in a cohort of 208 children aged 9-11 years and living in a mesoendemic focus of savannah-type onchocerciasis in Nigeria in order to detect prepatent onchocerciasis in children. Between time point A and time point B (9 months apart) the seroconversion rate was 19.4 per cent, and between time points B and C (15 months apart), a further 31.4 per cent of seronegative children had seroconverted. However, only a third of the seroconverted children became microfilaria-positive. From the time-lag between antibody conversion and skin snip conversion, we estimated that a 9-12 month interval was required for the detection of O. volvulus microfilariae following infection with viable third stage larva (L3s). The predictive value of antibody detection as a measure of skin microfilarial conversion was >90 per cent when the optical density (OD) at 490 nm was >0.80. We therefore propose a strategy for monitoring changes in transmission of onchocerciasis following vector control or chemotherapy through an evaluation of annual antibody seroconversion rates in a standardized sentinel population of children.

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APA

Ogunrinade, A. F., Awolola, S. O., Rotimi, O., & Chandrashekar, R. (2000). Longitudinal studies of skin microfilaria and antibody conversion rates in children living in an endemic focus of Onchocerciasis in Nigeria. Journal of Tropical Pediatrics, 46(6), 348–351. https://doi.org/10.1093/tropej/46.6.348

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