Cross-sectional review of mass drug administration impact on lymphatic filariasis elimination in Nepal
This cross-sectional epidemiological monitoring survey review evaluates the impact of mass drug administration (IDA) comprising ivermectin, diethylcarbamazine, and albendazole on lymphatic filariasis in Nepal. The study included 7,343 individuals aged >=20 years across six endemic districts, with data collected nine months after MDA. The primary objective was determining if infection prevalence dropped below the WHO transmission threshold of <1% microfilaremia.
The analysis revealed that nine of 12 evaluation units recorded <1% microfilaremia, whereas three evaluation units failed to achieve this target, showing >=1% prevalence in at least one site. Antigen prevalence was 4.47% and microfilariae prevalence was 0.34% overall. Significant associations were found between MDA participation and reduced antigen prevalence (AOR = 0.477; 95% CI: 0.385-0.591) and microfilariae prevalence (AOR = 0.089; 95% CI: 0.017-0.464).
Demographic factors also influenced outcomes; female sex was protective against antigen prevalence (AOR = 0.564; 95% CI: 0.441-0.721) and microfilariae prevalence (AOR = 0.326; 95% CI: 0.129-0.826). MDA uptake was associated with younger age (<40 years) (AOR = 0.72; 95% CI: 0.653-0.793) and cross-border residence (AOR = 0.616; 95% CI: 0.558-0.681), while agriculture and housewife occupations showed a risk association (AOR = 1.144; 95% CI: 1.008-1.298). Safety data, adverse events, and specific limitations were not reported. Given the observational nature of this cross-sectional design, causal inferences regarding elimination status must be tempered by the persistence of transmission in three sites.