Control of Schistosoma Mansoni Transmission by Chemotherapy in St. Lucia

Abstract
Control of Schistosoma mansoni transmission solely by treatment of all infected persons was attempted in Marquis Valley (population about 3,100), St. Lucia. Two-year results are reported. Excluding 26 pregnant patients, 709 of 729 persons who were found to be infected received treatment the first year. Most of these, 677, were given a single injection of hycanthone (2.5 mg/kg of body weight), and the same treatment was administered to 159 patients the second year. Side effects were not severe; the major side effect, vomiting, occurred in about 22% on both occasions. In villages with initially high transmission rates, the incidence of new infections in children 0 to 14 years fell from 20.8% before chemotherapy to 7.4% after 1 year and to 3.7% after 2 years. This pattern was significantly different from that in the comparison area where no control scheme exists. Chemotherapy alone appears to be a rapid, effective, and comparatively inexpensive method of controlling S. mansoni transmission in St. Lucia.