The short-term impact of albendazole treatment on Oesophagostomum bifurcum and hookworm infections in northern Ghana

J. B. Ziem, I. M.J. Kettenis, A. Bayita, E. A.T. Brienen, S. Dittoh, J. Horton, A. Olsen, P. Magnussen, A. M. Polderman*

*Corresponding author for this work
7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In November-December 2002, stool samples from a random sample of the human population (N = 190) in the Garu area of northern Ghana were checked for intestinal helminths, using a single Kato smear and duplicate coprocultures for each subject. All 190 subjects were subsequently treated with a single, 400-mg dose of albendazole and 146 of them were successfully re-examined 21-28 days post-treatment. Prior to treatment, 75.5% of the Kato smears were found to contain 'hookworm-like' eggs (with a geometric mean egg count among the positives of 578 eggs/g faeces), and the third-stage larvae of Oesophagostomum bifurcum and hookworm were found in the cultures of stools from 34.2% and 77.4% of the subjects, respectively. Among the subjects who had positive Kato smears before treatment, albendazole treatment led to a cure 'rate' of 79.0% and an egg-reduction 'rate' of 73.5%. The results from the coprocultures indicated cure 'rates' of 98.0% for O. bifurcum but only 51.3% for hookworm. Only one subject was still positive for O. bifurcum after treatment. Among those still positive for hookworm after treatment, the larva-reduction 'rate' was 79.8%. The egg-/larva-reduction 'rates' among those with heavy infections prior to treatment were > 90%, whether the data analysed came from the Kato smears or the coprocultures. It may be concluded that a single dose of albendazole is very likely to cure an O. bifurcum infection and to reduce greatly the intensity (but not the prevalence) of any hookworm infections.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAnnals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology
Volume98
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)385-390
Number of pages6
ISSN0003-4983
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2004

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