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Modelling the age-prevalence relationship in schistosomiasis: A secondary data analysis of school-aged-children in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi.

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Modelling the age-prevalence relationship in schistosomiasis: A secondary data analysis of school-aged-children in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi. / Reed, Amber; O'Ferrall, Angus; Kayuni, Sekeleghe et al.
In: Parasite epidemiology and control, Vol. 22, e00303, 31.08.2023.

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APA

Reed, A., O'Ferrall, A., Kayuni, S., Baxter, H., Stanton, M., Stothard, J. R., & Jewell, C. (2023). Modelling the age-prevalence relationship in schistosomiasis: A secondary data analysis of school-aged-children in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi. Parasite epidemiology and control, 22, Article e00303. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00303

Vancouver

Reed A, O'Ferrall A, Kayuni S, Baxter H, Stanton M, Stothard JR et al. Modelling the age-prevalence relationship in schistosomiasis: A secondary data analysis of school-aged-children in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi. Parasite epidemiology and control. 2023 Aug 31;22:e00303. Epub 2023 May 15. doi: 10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00303

Author

Reed, Amber ; O'Ferrall, Angus ; Kayuni, Sekeleghe et al. / Modelling the age-prevalence relationship in schistosomiasis : A secondary data analysis of school-aged-children in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi. In: Parasite epidemiology and control. 2023 ; Vol. 22.

Bibtex

@article{d420d17d054c49ad91730644d6a93923,
title = "Modelling the age-prevalence relationship in schistosomiasis: A secondary data analysis of school-aged-children in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi.",
abstract = "Schistosomiasis is an aquatic snail borne parasitic disease, with intestinal schistosomiasis (IS) and urogenital schistosomiasis (UGS) caused by Schistosoma mansoni and S. haematobium infections, respectively. School-aged-children (SAC) are a known vulnerable group and can also suffer from co-infections. Along the shoreline of Lake Malawi a newly emerging outbreak of IS is occurring with increasing UGS co-infection rates. Age-prevalence (co)infection profiles are not fully understood. To shed light on these (co)infection trends by Schistosoma species and by age of child, we conducted a secondary data analysis of primary epidemiological data collected from SAC in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi, as published previously. Available diagnostic data by child, were converted into binary response infection profiles for 520 children, aged 6–15, across 12 sampled schools. Generalised additive models were then fitted to mono- and dual-infections. These were used to identify consistent population trends, finding the prevalence of IS significantly increased [p = 8.45e-4] up to 11 years of age then decreasing thereafter. A similar age-prevalence association was observed for co-infection [p = 7.81e-3]. By contrast, no clear age-infection pattern for UGS was found [p = 0.114]. Peak prevalence of Schistosoma infection typically occurs around adolescence; however, in this newly established IS outbreak with rising prevalence of UGS co-infections, the peak appears to occur earlier, around the age of 11 years. As the outbreak of IS fulminates, further temporal analysis of the age-relationship with Schistosoma infection is justified. This should refer to age-prevalence models which could better reveal newly emerging transmission trends and Schistosoma species dynamics. Dynamical modelling of infections, alongside malacological niche mapping, should be considered to guide future primary data collection and intervention programmes.",
keywords = "Schistosoma mansoni, Schistosoma haematobium, Co-infection, Generalised additive models, Age profiling, School-aged-children",
author = "Amber Reed and Angus O'Ferrall and Sekeleghe Kayuni and Hamish Baxter and Michelle Stanton and Stothard, {J. Russell} and Christopher Jewell",
year = "2023",
month = aug,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00303",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
journal = "Parasite epidemiology and control",
issn = "2405-6731",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Modelling the age-prevalence relationship in schistosomiasis

T2 - A secondary data analysis of school-aged-children in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi.

AU - Reed, Amber

AU - O'Ferrall, Angus

AU - Kayuni, Sekeleghe

AU - Baxter, Hamish

AU - Stanton, Michelle

AU - Stothard, J. Russell

AU - Jewell, Christopher

PY - 2023/8/31

Y1 - 2023/8/31

N2 - Schistosomiasis is an aquatic snail borne parasitic disease, with intestinal schistosomiasis (IS) and urogenital schistosomiasis (UGS) caused by Schistosoma mansoni and S. haematobium infections, respectively. School-aged-children (SAC) are a known vulnerable group and can also suffer from co-infections. Along the shoreline of Lake Malawi a newly emerging outbreak of IS is occurring with increasing UGS co-infection rates. Age-prevalence (co)infection profiles are not fully understood. To shed light on these (co)infection trends by Schistosoma species and by age of child, we conducted a secondary data analysis of primary epidemiological data collected from SAC in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi, as published previously. Available diagnostic data by child, were converted into binary response infection profiles for 520 children, aged 6–15, across 12 sampled schools. Generalised additive models were then fitted to mono- and dual-infections. These were used to identify consistent population trends, finding the prevalence of IS significantly increased [p = 8.45e-4] up to 11 years of age then decreasing thereafter. A similar age-prevalence association was observed for co-infection [p = 7.81e-3]. By contrast, no clear age-infection pattern for UGS was found [p = 0.114]. Peak prevalence of Schistosoma infection typically occurs around adolescence; however, in this newly established IS outbreak with rising prevalence of UGS co-infections, the peak appears to occur earlier, around the age of 11 years. As the outbreak of IS fulminates, further temporal analysis of the age-relationship with Schistosoma infection is justified. This should refer to age-prevalence models which could better reveal newly emerging transmission trends and Schistosoma species dynamics. Dynamical modelling of infections, alongside malacological niche mapping, should be considered to guide future primary data collection and intervention programmes.

AB - Schistosomiasis is an aquatic snail borne parasitic disease, with intestinal schistosomiasis (IS) and urogenital schistosomiasis (UGS) caused by Schistosoma mansoni and S. haematobium infections, respectively. School-aged-children (SAC) are a known vulnerable group and can also suffer from co-infections. Along the shoreline of Lake Malawi a newly emerging outbreak of IS is occurring with increasing UGS co-infection rates. Age-prevalence (co)infection profiles are not fully understood. To shed light on these (co)infection trends by Schistosoma species and by age of child, we conducted a secondary data analysis of primary epidemiological data collected from SAC in Mangochi District, Lake Malawi, as published previously. Available diagnostic data by child, were converted into binary response infection profiles for 520 children, aged 6–15, across 12 sampled schools. Generalised additive models were then fitted to mono- and dual-infections. These were used to identify consistent population trends, finding the prevalence of IS significantly increased [p = 8.45e-4] up to 11 years of age then decreasing thereafter. A similar age-prevalence association was observed for co-infection [p = 7.81e-3]. By contrast, no clear age-infection pattern for UGS was found [p = 0.114]. Peak prevalence of Schistosoma infection typically occurs around adolescence; however, in this newly established IS outbreak with rising prevalence of UGS co-infections, the peak appears to occur earlier, around the age of 11 years. As the outbreak of IS fulminates, further temporal analysis of the age-relationship with Schistosoma infection is justified. This should refer to age-prevalence models which could better reveal newly emerging transmission trends and Schistosoma species dynamics. Dynamical modelling of infections, alongside malacological niche mapping, should be considered to guide future primary data collection and intervention programmes.

KW - Schistosoma mansoni

KW - Schistosoma haematobium

KW - Co-infection

KW - Generalised additive models

KW - Age profiling

KW - School-aged-children

U2 - 10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00303

DO - 10.1016/j.parepi.2023.e00303

M3 - Journal article

VL - 22

JO - Parasite epidemiology and control

JF - Parasite epidemiology and control

SN - 2405-6731

M1 - e00303

ER -