# Evaluation of a One Health public health program based on minimum inputs to control Taenia solium in Madagascar

**Authors:** Diana Edithe Andria-Mananjara, Modestine Raliniaina, Mihaja Rakotoarinoro, José A. Nely, Nivohanitra Perle Razafindraibe, Noromanana Sylvia Ramiandrasoa, Bettelhein Ramahefasoa, Valisoa Claude Rakotoarison, Paul R. Torgerson, Eric Cardinale, Harena Rasamoelina-Andriamanivo, Glenn T. Edosoa, Agnès Fleury, Kabemba E. Mwape, Bernadette Abela, Marshall W. Lightowlers, Meritxell Donadeu

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0013624 · PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases · 2025-11-05

## TL;DR

A public health program in Madagascar successfully reduced the spread of a parasitic disease in pigs and humans using minimal resources.

## Contribution

A large-scale, low-input public health program for controlling Taenia solium was implemented and evaluated in Madagascar.

## Key findings

- Pig vaccination and medication reduced viable T. solium infection in slaughter-age pigs from 30.8% to 8%.
- Human taeniasis prevalence dropped from 1.25% to 0.6% after a single mass drug administration.
- The program demonstrated effective control of T. solium transmission with minimal inputs.

## Abstract

Cysticercosis in humans caused by the parasite Taenia solium is one of the World Health Organization’s Neglected Tropical Diseases. The parasite is transmitted between the human host and pigs. Efforts to prevent the disease have relied mainly on treatment of people with anthelmintics. However, to date, there is no practical and effective control method that has been delivered as a public health program. Here we describe a large-scale, minimum inputs T. solium control program implemented as a public health program in Madagascar. Initially all pigs were vaccinated for porcine cysticercosis and medicated with oxfendazole, after which only young piglets and pigs imported into the program area were targeted for interventions. After piglet interventions were in place and on-going, a single mass drug administration (MDA) was delivered to the human population with a taeniacide. The outcomes were assessed one year after the human treatment, by comparing pre-and post-intervention levels of porcine cysticercosis caused by T. solium and human T. solium taeniasis. Over a twenty-two-month period, 96,735 pig vaccinations and oxfendazole medications were delivered and during the MDA, 117,216 people received taeniacide. Ninety percent of the pig population were receiving vaccination and medication at the end of the intervention period. Coverage of the eligible human population by the MDA was 62.5%. Prior to the intervention 30.8% of slaughter-age pigs had viable T. solium infection, reduced to 8% after the program. Human taeniasis was found to be 1.25% prior to the MDA and 0.6% one year after the MDA. The program successfully demonstrated effective control of T. solium transmission to pigs using minimum inputs and delivered as a public health program. Sustained control and expansion of the program could potentially lead to the elimination of the disease being a public health problem in Madagascar.

Cysticercosis caused by the cestode parasite Taenia solium is one of the World Health Organization’s neglected tropical diseases. We implemented One Health cysticercosis control as a public health program in a highly endemic region of Madagascar. The program was designed to require minimum inputs while achieving maximum impacts on control within a short period of time. Pigs were vaccinated with the TSOL18 vaccine and simultaneously treated with oxfendazole. Over a 2-year period, piglets 2–3 months of age were treated. After pig vaccination and medications where established, the human population received a single treatment with a taeniacide. The program was evaluated by assessment of porcine cysticercosis and human taeniasis before and 12 months after the human mass drug administration. More than 95,000 pig vaccination and medications were delivered and 117,000 persons received taeniacide. The intervention significantly reduced the prevalence of cysticercosis in slaughter-age pigs and entirely eliminated viable porcine cysticercosis in animals that had received two vaccinations and medications. Continuation and expansion of the program could have the potential to eliminate T. solium from the program area, or even from the entire country.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** oxfendazole (PubChem CID 40854)
- **Diseases:** cysticercosis (MONDO:0015484)
- **Species:** Taenia solium (taxon 6204)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** porcine (MESH:D004682), T. solium infection (MESH:D013622), Neglected Tropical Diseases (MESH:D058069), Cysticercosis (MESH:D003551)
- **Chemicals:** oxfendazole (MESH:C011030)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Taenia solium (pig tapeworm, species) [taxon 6204], Sus scrofa (pig, species) [taxon 9823]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12588529/full.md

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12588529/full.md

## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12588529/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12588529