A Randomized, Open-Label Study of the Tolerability and Efficacy of One or Three Daily Doses of Ivermectin Plus Diethylcarbamazine and Albendazole (IDA) Versus One Dose of Ivermectin Plus Albendazole (IA) For Treatment of Onchocerciasis
Date
2023
Authors
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PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Abstract
Background
Onchocerciasis (“river blindness”) has been targeted for elimination. New treatments that
kill or permanently sterilize female worms could accelerate this process. Prior studies have
shown that triple drug treatment with ivermectin plus diethylcarbamazine and albendazole
(IDA) leads to prolonged clearance of microfilaremia in persons with lymphatic filariasis. We
now report results from a randomized clinical trial that compared the tolerability and efficacy
of IDA vs. a comparator treatment (ivermectin plus albendazole, IA) in persons with
onchocerciasis.
Methods and findings
The study was performed in the Volta region of Ghana. Persons with microfiladermia and
palpable subcutaneous nodules were pre-treated with two oral doses of ivermectin (150 μg/
kg) separated by at least 6 months prior to treatment with either a single oral dose of ivermectin
150 μg/kg plus albendazole 400 mg (IA), a single oral dose of IDA (IDA1, IA plus
diethylcarbamazine (DEC. 6 mg/kg) or three consecutive daily doses of IDA (IDA3). These treatments were tolerated equally well. While adverse events were common (approximately
30% overall), no severe or serious treatment-emergent adverse events were observed.
Skin microfilariae were absent or present with very low densities after all three treatments
through 18 months, at which time nodules were excised for histological assessment. Nodule
histology was evaluated by two independent assessors who were masked regarding participant
infection status or treatment assignment. Significantly lower percentages of female
worms were alive and fertile in nodules recovered from study participants after IDA1 (40/
261, 15.3%) and IDA3 (34/281, 12.1%) than after IA (41/180, 22.8%). This corresponds to a
40% reduction in the percentage of female worms that were alive and fertile after IDA treatments
relative to results observed after the IA comparator treatment (P = 0.004). Percentages
of female worms that were alive (a secondary outcome of the study) were also lower
after IDA treatments (301/574, 52.4%) than after IA (127/198, 64.1%) (P = 0.004). Importantly,
some comparisons (including the reduced %of fertile female worms after IDA1 vs IA
treatment, which was the primary endpoint for the study) were not statistically significant
when results were adjusted for intraclass correlation of worm fertility and viability for worms
recovered from individual study participants.
Conclusions
Results from this pilot study suggest that IDA was well tolerated after ivermectin pretreatment.
They also suggest that IDA was more effective than the comparator treatment IA for
killing or sterilizing female O. volvulus worms. No other short-course oral treatment for
onchocerciasis has been demonstrated to have macrofilaricidal activity. However, this first
study was too small to provide conclusive results. Therefore, additional studies will be
needed to confirm these promising findings.
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Research Article
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Citation
Citation: Opoku NO, Doe F, Dubben B, Fetcho N, Fischer K, Fischer PU, et al. (2023) A randomized, open-label study of the tolerability and efficacy of one or three daily doses of ivermectin plus diethylcarbamazine and albendazole (IDA) versus one dose of ivermectin plus albendazole (IA) for treatment of onchocerciasis. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 17(5): e0011365. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal. pntd.0011365