TY - JOUR
T1 - Review of the WHO guideline on preventive chemotherapy for public health control of strongyloidiasis
AU - Lo, Nathan
AU - Addiss, D
AU - Buonfrate, Dora
AU - Amor, Arancha
AU - Anegagrie, Melaku
AU - Bisoffi, Zeno
AU - Bradbury, RS
AU - Keiser, Jennifer
AU - Kepha, Stella
AU - Khieu, Virak
AU - Krolewiecki, Alejandro
AU - Mbonigaba, Jean B
AU - Munoz, Jose
AU - Mutapi, Francisca
AU - Novela, Valdemiro
AU - Vaz Nery, Susana
AU - Coffeng, Luc
AU - de Vlas, Sake
AU - Bartoszko, Jessica
AU - Moja, Lorenzo
AU - Mupfasoni, Denise
AU - Montresor, Antonio
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 World Health Organization
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - Strongyloidiasis is a soil-transmitted helminthiasis that is estimated to affect 300–600 million people across Asia, Africa, South and central America, and the Pacific. This neglected parasitic disease is most known for its ability to persist as a lifelong infection due to autoinfection and its risk of hyperinfection and disseminated disease during immunosuppression, which has a more than 60% case fatality. Despite the large global burden of strongyloidiasis, there have been no large-scale public health programmes or WHO guidelines directed towards its control and elimination. However, over the past decade, key scientific and policy changes along with requests from endemic countries have led to WHO incorporating strongyloidiasis into its 2021–30 roadmap and public health targets for control and elimination of neglected tropical diseases. In 2024, WHO published its first guideline on public health control of strongyloidiasis with a single recommendation: in endemic settings with a Strongyloides stercoralis infection prevalence of 5% or higher (measured either with Baermann or agar plate culture from stool specimens), WHO conditionally recommends mass drug administration with single-dose ivermectin (200 μg/kg; oral therapy) in all age groups from 5 years and older to reduce strongyloidiasis. This Review, written by the 2023–24 strongyloidiasis guidelines development group along with WHO colleagues and international experts, presents a summary of the recently published WHO guideline recommendation for strongyloidiasis, and the supporting evidence, considerations for public health implementation, and future research needs.
AB - Strongyloidiasis is a soil-transmitted helminthiasis that is estimated to affect 300–600 million people across Asia, Africa, South and central America, and the Pacific. This neglected parasitic disease is most known for its ability to persist as a lifelong infection due to autoinfection and its risk of hyperinfection and disseminated disease during immunosuppression, which has a more than 60% case fatality. Despite the large global burden of strongyloidiasis, there have been no large-scale public health programmes or WHO guidelines directed towards its control and elimination. However, over the past decade, key scientific and policy changes along with requests from endemic countries have led to WHO incorporating strongyloidiasis into its 2021–30 roadmap and public health targets for control and elimination of neglected tropical diseases. In 2024, WHO published its first guideline on public health control of strongyloidiasis with a single recommendation: in endemic settings with a Strongyloides stercoralis infection prevalence of 5% or higher (measured either with Baermann or agar plate culture from stool specimens), WHO conditionally recommends mass drug administration with single-dose ivermectin (200 μg/kg; oral therapy) in all age groups from 5 years and older to reduce strongyloidiasis. This Review, written by the 2023–24 strongyloidiasis guidelines development group along with WHO colleagues and international experts, presents a summary of the recently published WHO guideline recommendation for strongyloidiasis, and the supporting evidence, considerations for public health implementation, and future research needs.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85209628084&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S1473-3099(24)00595-4
DO - 10.1016/S1473-3099(24)00595-4
M3 - Review article
SN - 1473-3099
VL - 25
SP - e146-e152
JO - Lancet Infectious Diseases
JF - Lancet Infectious Diseases
IS - 3
ER -