Feasibility of interrupting the transmission of soil-transmitted helminths: the DeWorm3 community cluster-randomised controlled trial in Benin, India, and Malawi
Soil-transmitted helminths are targeted for elimination as a public health problem. This study assessed whether, with high coverage, community-wide mass drug administration (MDA) could lead to transmission interruption. DeWorm3 is an open-label, community cluster-randomised controlled trial in Benin...
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Published in | The Lancet (British edition) Vol. 406; no. 10502; pp. 475 - 488 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
Elsevier Ltd
02.08.2025
Elsevier Limited |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0140-6736 1474-547X 1474-547X |
DOI | 10.1016/S0140-6736(25)00766-4 |
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Abstract | Soil-transmitted helminths are targeted for elimination as a public health problem. This study assessed whether, with high coverage, community-wide mass drug administration (MDA) could lead to transmission interruption.
DeWorm3 is an open-label, community cluster-randomised controlled trial in Benin, India, and Malawi. In each country, a single governmental administrative unit (population ≥80 000 individuals) with soil-transmitted helminth endemicity and participation in at least five rounds of community-wide MDA for lymphatic filariasis, was divided into 40 clusters (population ≥1650 individuals), which were randomly assigned (1:1) to community-wide MDA versus school-based deworming. Laboratory personnel were masked to exposure status and all investigators were masked to post-baseline outcome data until unmasking. In all clusters, preschool-aged and school-aged children received school-based deworming as per national guidelines for 3 years. In intervention clusters, door-to-door community-wide MDA (a single oral dose of 400 mg albendazole) was delivered to all eligible individuals biannually by community drug distributors for 3 years. All individuals aged 12 months and older in India and Benin and aged 24 months and older in Malawi were eligible for treatment, except women in the first trimester of pregnancy, those with adverse reactions to benzimidazoles, those who were acutely ill or intoxicated, or those reporting treatment within the previous 2 weeks. The co-primary outcomes were individual-level prevalence and cluster-level transmission interruption (ie, weighted prevalence of predominant species of ≤2%) of the predominant soil-transmitted helminth species, assessed by quantitative PCR (qPCR) 24 months after the last round of MDA. The analysis set contained a subset of randomly selected participants per cluster who enrolled in the endline assessment, provided a stool sample, and had a qPCR result. All individuals who received treatment were eligible for inclusion in the safety population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03014167), and is active but not recruiting.
Between Oct 10, 2017, and Feb 17, 2023, 120 clusters (40 clusters per country, comprising 357 716 individuals) were randomly assigned, 60 to community-wide MDA and 60 to school-based deworming. 184 030 (51·4%) individuals in the clusters at baseline were female, 173 663 (48·5%) were male, and 23 (<0·1%) were other. The analysis set consisted of 58 827 individuals in the control group and 58 554 in the intervention group 24 months after the cessation of all deworming, Necator americanus prevalence (the predominant species at all sites) in the community-wide MDA group was lower than the school-based deworming group in Benin (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] 0·44 [95% CI 0·34–0·58]), India (0·41 [0·32–0·52]), and Malawi (0·40 [0·34–0·46]). Transmission interruption was achieved for N americanus in 11 (55%) of 20 intervention clusters versus six (30%) of 20 control clusters in Benin (p=0·20), in one (5%) intervention cluster versus no control clusters in India (p=1·00), and in no clusters in either group in Malawi (p=1·00). 984 adverse events were reported among 487 participants over the study, of which 32 among 13 participants resulted in hospitalisation and were classified as serious adverse events (three of which were related to study procedures).
Soil-transmitted helminth transmission interruption might be possible in focal geographies but does not appear to be programmatically feasible within the evaluated timeframe. Community-wide MDA should be considered as an alternative strategy to school-based deworming programmes to improve equity and outcomes in helminth-endemic areas.
The Gates Foundation. |
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AbstractList | Soil-transmitted helminths are targeted for elimination as a public health problem. This study assessed whether, with high coverage, community-wide mass drug administration (MDA) could lead to transmission interruption.BACKGROUNDSoil-transmitted helminths are targeted for elimination as a public health problem. This study assessed whether, with high coverage, community-wide mass drug administration (MDA) could lead to transmission interruption.DeWorm3 is an open-label, community cluster-randomised controlled trial in Benin, India, and Malawi. In each country, a single governmental administrative unit (population ≥80 000 individuals) with soil-transmitted helminth endemicity and participation in at least five rounds of community-wide MDA for lymphatic filariasis, was divided into 40 clusters (population ≥1650 individuals), which were randomly assigned (1:1) to community-wide MDA versus school-based deworming. Laboratory personnel were masked to exposure status and all investigators were masked to post-baseline outcome data until unmasking. In all clusters, preschool-aged and school-aged children received school-based deworming as per national guidelines for 3 years. In intervention clusters, door-to-door community-wide MDA (a single oral dose of 400 mg albendazole) was delivered to all eligible individuals biannually by community drug distributors for 3 years. All individuals aged 12 months and older in India and Benin and aged 24 months and older in Malawi were eligible for treatment, except women in the first trimester of pregnancy, those with adverse reactions to benzimidazoles, those who were acutely ill or intoxicated, or those reporting treatment within the previous 2 weeks. The co-primary outcomes were individual-level prevalence and cluster-level transmission interruption (ie, weighted prevalence of predominant species of ≤2%) of the predominant soil-transmitted helminth species, assessed by quantitative PCR (qPCR) 24 months after the last round of MDA. The analysis set contained a subset of randomly selected participants per cluster who enrolled in the endline assessment, provided a stool sample, and had a qPCR result. All individuals who received treatment were eligible for inclusion in the safety population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03014167), and is active but not recruiting.METHODSDeWorm3 is an open-label, community cluster-randomised controlled trial in Benin, India, and Malawi. In each country, a single governmental administrative unit (population ≥80 000 individuals) with soil-transmitted helminth endemicity and participation in at least five rounds of community-wide MDA for lymphatic filariasis, was divided into 40 clusters (population ≥1650 individuals), which were randomly assigned (1:1) to community-wide MDA versus school-based deworming. Laboratory personnel were masked to exposure status and all investigators were masked to post-baseline outcome data until unmasking. In all clusters, preschool-aged and school-aged children received school-based deworming as per national guidelines for 3 years. In intervention clusters, door-to-door community-wide MDA (a single oral dose of 400 mg albendazole) was delivered to all eligible individuals biannually by community drug distributors for 3 years. All individuals aged 12 months and older in India and Benin and aged 24 months and older in Malawi were eligible for treatment, except women in the first trimester of pregnancy, those with adverse reactions to benzimidazoles, those who were acutely ill or intoxicated, or those reporting treatment within the previous 2 weeks. The co-primary outcomes were individual-level prevalence and cluster-level transmission interruption (ie, weighted prevalence of predominant species of ≤2%) of the predominant soil-transmitted helminth species, assessed by quantitative PCR (qPCR) 24 months after the last round of MDA. The analysis set contained a subset of randomly selected participants per cluster who enrolled in the endline assessment, provided a stool sample, and had a qPCR result. All individuals who received treatment were eligible for inclusion in the safety population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03014167), and is active but not recruiting.Between Oct 10, 2017, and Feb 17, 2023, 120 clusters (40 clusters per country, comprising 357 716 individuals) were randomly assigned, 60 to community-wide MDA and 60 to school-based deworming. 184 030 (51·4%) individuals in the clusters at baseline were female, 173 663 (48·5%) were male, and 23 (<0·1%) were other. The analysis set consisted of 58 827 individuals in the control group and 58 554 in the intervention group 24 months after the cessation of all deworming, Necator americanus prevalence (the predominant species at all sites) in the community-wide MDA group was lower than the school-based deworming group in Benin (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] 0·44 [95% CI 0·34-0·58]), India (0·41 [0·32-0·52]), and Malawi (0·40 [0·34-0·46]). Transmission interruption was achieved for N americanus in 11 (55%) of 20 intervention clusters versus six (30%) of 20 control clusters in Benin (p=0·20), in one (5%) intervention cluster versus no control clusters in India (p=1·00), and in no clusters in either group in Malawi (p=1·00). 984 adverse events were reported among 487 participants over the study, of which 32 among 13 participants resulted in hospitalisation and were classified as serious adverse events (three of which were related to study procedures).FINDINGSBetween Oct 10, 2017, and Feb 17, 2023, 120 clusters (40 clusters per country, comprising 357 716 individuals) were randomly assigned, 60 to community-wide MDA and 60 to school-based deworming. 184 030 (51·4%) individuals in the clusters at baseline were female, 173 663 (48·5%) were male, and 23 (<0·1%) were other. The analysis set consisted of 58 827 individuals in the control group and 58 554 in the intervention group 24 months after the cessation of all deworming, Necator americanus prevalence (the predominant species at all sites) in the community-wide MDA group was lower than the school-based deworming group in Benin (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] 0·44 [95% CI 0·34-0·58]), India (0·41 [0·32-0·52]), and Malawi (0·40 [0·34-0·46]). Transmission interruption was achieved for N americanus in 11 (55%) of 20 intervention clusters versus six (30%) of 20 control clusters in Benin (p=0·20), in one (5%) intervention cluster versus no control clusters in India (p=1·00), and in no clusters in either group in Malawi (p=1·00). 984 adverse events were reported among 487 participants over the study, of which 32 among 13 participants resulted in hospitalisation and were classified as serious adverse events (three of which were related to study procedures).Soil-transmitted helminth transmission interruption might be possible in focal geographies but does not appear to be programmatically feasible within the evaluated timeframe. Community-wide MDA should be considered as an alternative strategy to school-based deworming programmes to improve equity and outcomes in helminth-endemic areas.INTERPRETATIONSoil-transmitted helminth transmission interruption might be possible in focal geographies but does not appear to be programmatically feasible within the evaluated timeframe. Community-wide MDA should be considered as an alternative strategy to school-based deworming programmes to improve equity and outcomes in helminth-endemic areas.The Gates Foundation.FUNDINGThe Gates Foundation. Soil-transmitted helminths are targeted for elimination as a public health problem. This study assessed whether, with high coverage, community-wide mass drug administration (MDA) could lead to transmission interruption. DeWorm3 is an open-label, community cluster-randomised controlled trial in Benin, India, and Malawi. In each country, a single governmental administrative unit (population ≥80 000 individuals) with soil-transmitted helminth endemicity and participation in at least five rounds of community-wide MDA for lymphatic filariasis, was divided into 40 clusters (population ≥1650 individuals), which were randomly assigned (1:1) to community-wide MDA versus school-based deworming. Laboratory personnel were masked to exposure status and all investigators were masked to post-baseline outcome data until unmasking. In all clusters, preschool-aged and school-aged children received school-based deworming as per national guidelines for 3 years. In intervention clusters, door-to-door community-wide MDA (a single oral dose of 400 mg albendazole) was delivered to all eligible individuals biannually by community drug distributors for 3 years. All individuals aged 12 months and older in India and Benin and aged 24 months and older in Malawi were eligible for treatment, except women in the first trimester of pregnancy, those with adverse reactions to benzimidazoles, those who were acutely ill or intoxicated, or those reporting treatment within the previous 2 weeks. The co-primary outcomes were individual-level prevalence and cluster-level transmission interruption (ie, weighted prevalence of predominant species of ≤2%) of the predominant soil-transmitted helminth species, assessed by quantitative PCR (qPCR) 24 months after the last round of MDA. The analysis set contained a subset of randomly selected participants per cluster who enrolled in the endline assessment, provided a stool sample, and had a qPCR result. All individuals who received treatment were eligible for inclusion in the safety population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03014167), and is active but not recruiting. Between Oct 10, 2017, and Feb 17, 2023, 120 clusters (40 clusters per country, comprising 357 716 individuals) were randomly assigned, 60 to community-wide MDA and 60 to school-based deworming. 184 030 (51·4%) individuals in the clusters at baseline were female, 173 663 (48·5%) were male, and 23 (<0·1%) were other. The analysis set consisted of 58 827 individuals in the control group and 58 554 in the intervention group 24 months after the cessation of all deworming, Necator americanus prevalence (the predominant species at all sites) in the community-wide MDA group was lower than the school-based deworming group in Benin (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] 0·44 [95% CI 0·34–0·58]), India (0·41 [0·32–0·52]), and Malawi (0·40 [0·34–0·46]). Transmission interruption was achieved for N americanus in 11 (55%) of 20 intervention clusters versus six (30%) of 20 control clusters in Benin (p=0·20), in one (5%) intervention cluster versus no control clusters in India (p=1·00), and in no clusters in either group in Malawi (p=1·00). 984 adverse events were reported among 487 participants over the study, of which 32 among 13 participants resulted in hospitalisation and were classified as serious adverse events (three of which were related to study procedures). Soil-transmitted helminth transmission interruption might be possible in focal geographies but does not appear to be programmatically feasible within the evaluated timeframe. Community-wide MDA should be considered as an alternative strategy to school-based deworming programmes to improve equity and outcomes in helminth-endemic areas. The Gates Foundation. Summary Background Soil-transmitted helminths are targeted for elimination as a public health problem. This study assessed whether, with high coverage, community-wide mass drug administration (MDA) could lead to transmission interruption. Methods DeWorm3 is an open-label, community cluster-randomised controlled trial in Benin, India, and Malawi. In each country, a single governmental administrative unit (population ≥80 000 individuals) with soil-transmitted helminth endemicity and participation in at least five rounds of community-wide MDA for lymphatic filariasis, was divided into 40 clusters (population ≥1650 individuals), which were randomly assigned (1:1) to community-wide MDA versus school-based deworming. Laboratory personnel were masked to exposure status and all investigators were masked to post-baseline outcome data until unmasking. In all clusters, preschool-aged and school-aged children received school-based deworming as per national guidelines for 3 years. In intervention clusters, door-to-door community-wide MDA (a single oral dose of 400 mg albendazole) was delivered to all eligible individuals biannually by community drug distributors for 3 years. All individuals aged 12 months and older in India and Benin and aged 24 months and older in Malawi were eligible for treatment, except women in the first trimester of pregnancy, those with adverse reactions to benzimidazoles, those who were acutely ill or intoxicated, or those reporting treatment within the previous 2 weeks. The co-primary outcomes were individual-level prevalence and cluster-level transmission interruption (ie, weighted prevalence of predominant species of ≤2%) of the predominant soil-transmitted helminth species, assessed by quantitative PCR (qPCR) 24 months after the last round of MDA. The analysis set contained a subset of randomly selected participants per cluster who enrolled in the endline assessment, provided a stool sample, and had a qPCR result. All individuals who received treatment were eligible for inclusion in the safety population. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov ( NCT03014167), and is active but not recruiting. Findings Between Oct 10, 2017, and Feb 17, 2023, 120 clusters (40 clusters per country, comprising 357 716 individuals) were randomly assigned, 60 to community-wide MDA and 60 to school-based deworming. 184 030 (51·4%) individuals in the clusters at baseline were female, 173 663 (48·5%) were male, and 23 (<0·1%) were other. The analysis set consisted of 58 827 individuals in the control group and 58 554 in the intervention group 24 months after the cessation of all deworming, Necator americanus prevalence (the predominant species at all sites) in the community-wide MDA group was lower than the school-based deworming group in Benin (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] 0·44 [95% CI 0·34–0·58]), India (0·41 [0·32–0·52]), and Malawi (0·40 [0·34–0·46]). Transmission interruption was achieved for N americanus in 11 (55%) of 20 intervention clusters versus six (30%) of 20 control clusters in Benin (p=0·20), in one (5%) intervention cluster versus no control clusters in India (p=1·00), and in no clusters in either group in Malawi (p=1·00). 984 adverse events were reported among 487 participants over the study, of which 32 among 13 participants resulted in hospitalisation and were classified as serious adverse events (three of which were related to study procedures). Interpretation Soil-transmitted helminth transmission interruption might be possible in focal geographies but does not appear to be programmatically feasible within the evaluated timeframe. Community-wide MDA should be considered as an alternative strategy to school-based deworming programmes to improve equity and outcomes in helminth-endemic areas. Funding The Gates Foundation. |
Author | Witek-McManus, Stefan Janagaraj, Venkateshprabhu Atindegla, Eloïc Damien, Georgia Houngbégnon, Parfait Kalua, Khumbo Ramesh, Rohan Michael Mangawa, Hastings Ahlonsou, Justine Ajjampur, Sitara Swarna Rao Anderson, Roy Msiska, Rejoice Accrombessi, Manfred Mario Kokou Manuel, Malathi Abdullah, Jasmine Farzana Sheik Goodman, Jeanne L Galagan, Sean R Pilotte, Nils Samikwa, Lyson Chabi, Félicien Kennedy, David Aloukoutou Layo, Edith Sekar, Naveen Kumar Pullan, Rachel Halliday, Katherine E Thomas, Katherine K Oswald, William E Pearman, Emily Sheikh, Mariyam Chaima, David Littlewood, D Timothy J Sarkar, Rajiv Rains, Doug Siko, Edoux Joël Eric Williams, Steven A Rogers, Elliott Luty, Adrian J F Sharrock, Katherine Legge, Hugo Brooker, Simon Tanimomon, Fadel Means, Arianna Rubin Ásbjörnsdóttir, Kristjana H Walson, Judd L Schaefer, Alexandra Viwami, Firmine Bailey, Robin Ibikounlé, Moudachirou Chisambi, Alvin Cottrell, Gilles Massougbodji, Achille Togbevi, Comlanvi Innocent Palanisamy, Gokila Israel, Gideon John Shumays, Alyson Kaliappan, Saravanakum |
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surname: Cottrell fullname: Cottrell, Gilles organization: Université Paris Cité, French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development, Mother and Child in Tropical Environments (IRD), F-75006 Paris, France – sequence: 7 givenname: Sean R surname: Galagan fullname: Galagan, Sean R organization: The DeWorm3 Project, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA – sequence: 8 givenname: Katherine E surname: Halliday fullname: Halliday, Katherine E organization: Department of Disease Control, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK – sequence: 9 givenname: Parfait surname: Houngbégnon fullname: Houngbégnon, Parfait organization: Institut de Recherche Clinique du Benin, Abomey-Calavi, Benin – sequence: 10 givenname: Moudachirou surname: Ibikounlé fullname: Ibikounlé, Moudachirou organization: Institut de Recherche Clinique du Benin, Abomey-Calavi, Benin – sequence: 11 givenname: Gideon John surname: Israel fullname: 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givenname: Nils surname: Pilotte fullname: Pilotte, Nils organization: Department of Biological Sciences, Quinnipiac University, Hamden, CT, USA – sequence: 22 givenname: Rachel surname: Pullan fullname: Pullan, Rachel organization: Department of Disease Control, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK – sequence: 23 givenname: Rohan Michael surname: Ramesh fullname: Ramesh, Rohan Michael organization: The Wellcome Trust Research Laboratory, Division of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India – sequence: 24 givenname: Lyson surname: Samikwa fullname: Samikwa, Lyson organization: Blantyre Institute for Community Outreach, Lions SightFirst Eye Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi – sequence: 25 givenname: James surname: Simwanza fullname: Simwanza, James organization: Blantyre Institute for Community Outreach, Lions SightFirst Eye Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi – sequence: 26 givenname: Katherine K surname: Thomas fullname: Thomas, Katherine K organization: The DeWorm3 Project, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA – sequence: 27 givenname: Steven A surname: Williams fullname: Williams, Steven A organization: Department of Biological Sciences, Smith College, Northampton, MA, USA – sequence: 28 givenname: Stefan surname: Witek-McManus fullname: Witek-McManus, Stefan organization: Department of Disease Control, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK – sequence: 29 givenname: Judd L surname: Walson fullname: Walson, Judd L email: jwalson1@jh.edu organization: The DeWorm3 Project, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA – sequence: 30 givenname: Manfred Mario Kokou surname: Accrombessi fullname: Accrombessi, Manfred Mario Kokou – sequence: 31 givenname: Justine surname: Ahlonsou fullname: Ahlonsou, Justine – sequence: 32 givenname: Roy surname: Anderson fullname: Anderson, Roy – sequence: 33 givenname: Eloïc surname: 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fullname: Aloukoutou Layo, Edith – sequence: 46 givenname: Hastings surname: Mangawa fullname: Mangawa, Hastings – sequence: 47 givenname: Zayina Zondervenni surname: Manoharan fullname: Manoharan, Zayina Zondervenni – sequence: 48 givenname: Rejoice surname: Msiska fullname: Msiska, Rejoice – sequence: 49 givenname: Gokila surname: Palanisamy fullname: Palanisamy, Gokila – sequence: 50 givenname: Emily surname: Pearman fullname: Pearman, Emily – sequence: 51 givenname: Doug surname: Rains fullname: Rains, Doug – sequence: 52 givenname: Elliott surname: Rogers fullname: Rogers, Elliott – sequence: 53 givenname: Rajiv surname: Sarkar fullname: Sarkar, Rajiv – sequence: 54 givenname: Naveen Kumar surname: Sekar fullname: Sekar, Naveen Kumar – sequence: 55 givenname: Alexandra surname: Schaefer fullname: Schaefer, Alexandra – sequence: 56 givenname: Mariyam surname: Sheikh fullname: Sheikh, Mariyam – sequence: 57 givenname: Katherine surname: Sharrock fullname: Sharrock, Katherine – sequence: 58 givenname: Alyson surname: Shumays fullname: Shumays, Alyson – sequence: 59 givenname: Edoux Joël Eric surname: Siko fullname: Siko, Edoux Joël Eric – sequence: 60 givenname: Fadel surname: Tanimomon fullname: Tanimomon, Fadel – sequence: 61 givenname: Joseph surname: Timothy fullname: Timothy, Joseph – sequence: 62 givenname: Comlanvi Innocent surname: Togbevi fullname: Togbevi, Comlanvi Innocent – sequence: 63 givenname: Firmine surname: Viwami fullname: Viwami, Firmine |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/40752908$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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ContentType | Journal Article |
Contributor | Rogers, Elliott Janagaraj, Venkateshprabhu Sharrock, Katherine Brooker, Simon Tanimomon, Fadel Atindegla, Eloïc Damien, Georgia Mangawa, Hastings Schaefer, Alexandra Ahlonsou, Justine Viwami, Firmine Anderson, Roy Msiska, Rejoice Accrombessi, Manfred Mario Kokou Chisambi, Alvin Abdullah, Jasmine Farzana Sheik Goodman, Jeanne L Chabi, Félicien Kennedy, David Aloukoutou Layo, Edith Sekar, Naveen Kumar Togbevi, Comlanvi Innocent Palanisamy, Gokila Shumays, Alyson Pearman, Emily Sheikh, Mariyam Manoharan, Zayina Zondervenni Chaima, David Emmanuel-Fabula, Mira Sarkar, Rajiv Timothy, Joseph Rains, Doug Bundy, Donald A P Siko, Edoux Joël Eric |
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Snippet | Soil-transmitted helminths are targeted for elimination as a public health problem. This study assessed whether, with high coverage, community-wide mass drug... Summary Background Soil-transmitted helminths are targeted for elimination as a public health problem. This study assessed whether, with high coverage,... |
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Title | Feasibility of interrupting the transmission of soil-transmitted helminths: the DeWorm3 community cluster-randomised controlled trial in Benin, India, and Malawi |
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