13 research outputs found

    Impact of repeated mass ivermectin administration using a community directed approach on L. loa infection in Chrysops silacea of the rain forest and forest savanna of Cameroon

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    Loiasis is an endemic filarial infection in the rainforest zone of West and Central Africa. Repeated annual community-directed treatment with ivermectin (CDTI) delivered for several years to control onchocerciasis has been shown to reduce the prevalence and intensity of Loiasis in some co-endemic areas. However, the impact of these multiple rounds of CDTI on entomological indicators of loiasis transmission is not known, and was therefore assessed in this study in areas with contrasting histories of CDTI. The study was conducted in the East, North-west and South-west 1 CDTI project sites of Cameroon. Two communities per CDTI project were selected for fly collection and dissection. Ivermectin treatment coverage was documented in these areas, and this was correlated to infection and infective rates. A total of 7029 female were collected from 6 communities of the 3 CDTI projects (East, North-west, and South-west 1) and from 2 communities in a non-CDTI district (East). biting densities and parous rates were significantly reduced in the North-west and South-west sites post-CDTI, while in the East, biting densities were similar in non-CDTI and CDTI sites, with higher parous rates observed in the non-CDTI site. Infection and infective rates in the East non-CDTI site were 4.4% and 1.8% respectively, as compared to 3.3% and 1.3% in the CDTI site after 10 ivermectin rounds (there were no baseline data for the latter). In the North-west site, significant reductions in infection and infective rates from 10.2% and 4.2% respectively, to 3.5% and 1.2 (after 9 rounds of ivermectin treatment), were recorded following CDTI. In the South-west, infection rate significantly increased from 1.74% to 2.8% and infective rate remained statistically unchanged after 14 rounds of CDTI (0.45% - 0.40%). Similar trends in Mean Head L3 were observed except in the East site where this indicator was similar in both CDTI and control sites. Only in the North-west site did monthly transmission potentials decrease significantly. This study demonstrated that the impact of repeated annual treatment with ivermectin for the control of onchocerciasis using community directed delivery approach on the entomological indicators of loiasis varies with bioecological zones. Community directed treatment with ivermectin induced a significant reduction in the entomological indicators of loiasis in the North-West project site which lies in forest savanna area. A non-significant decrease was observed in the East project site and in contrast, a significant increase was observed in the South-West 1 project site which both lies in the rainforest zones. [Abstract copyright: © 2024 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of World Federation of Parasitologists.

    Hydrodynamic Limit for the Ginzburg-Landau ∇φ Interface Model with a Conservation Law

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    Hydrodynamic limit for the Ginzburg-Landau ∇φ interface model was established in [5] under the periodic boundary conditions. This paper extends their results to the modified dynamics which preserve the total volume of each microscopic phase. Nonlinear partial differential equation of fourth order

    Factors influencing patient survival in a group of men with prostate cancer in Yaoundé, Cameroon

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    Purpose: We evaluated the survival time of patients with stage D cancer of the prostate (CaP) in Yaounde, Cameroon, so as to lay the groundwork for evaluating patient management and outcomes in such communities in sub-Saharan Africa. Patients and Materials: A cohort of 200 patients was recruited at diagnosis and followed over a 171 month period. They had a standard work-up and staging protocol except for the absence of bone scan. Treatment was offered after they were staged following the Whitemore ABCD-system. Standard statistical analysis was performed for quantitative variables and graphs developed for continuous variables. Pearson correlation and Chi-square tests were used to evaluate associations between variables. The Kaplan-Meier product-limit method was used to estimate survival functions and log-rank test to compare data from complete survival curves. The statistical significance level was fixed at p values less than or equal to 0.05. Results: The mean age of our patients was 67 years and 41.5% of them were in the 60-69 year-bracket. Survival was worse for those 66 years and older (p = 0.013). Patient survival correlated with tumor differentiation such that a Gleason score of 6 or greater meant diminished survival time (p = 0.014). For the entire group, median overall survival was 40.5 months, 44% at 5 years and 17% at 10 years. Patients who received multi-modal therapy (complete androgen ablation by surgical and medical means, and radiation to the pelvis and metastatic sites) seemed to have the best survival (p \u3c 0.001) although patient stratification into treatment groups was not randomized. A comparison of survival of African-American cohorts and this group showed no statistical significance (p = 0.1). Conclusion: Survival of patients with prostate cancer in Yaounde is just as low as in African-Americans. Survival is worse however, for men older than 66 years in Yaounde. A call for comparative and collaborative clinical trials is made
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