# Onchocerca volvulus infection prevalence and intensity in Logo and Nyarambe Health Zones in Ituri, Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2010 and in 2021–2023: results of screening for clinical trials of moxidectin versus ivermectin

**Authors:** Françoise N. Ngave, Deogratias U. Wonyarossi, Germain M. Abhafule, Joël L. Mande, Amos Nyathirombo, Claude B. Uvon, Anuarite A. Raciu, Michel Mandro, Pascal T. Adroba, Tony O. Ukety, Innocent A. Mananu, Gisèle L. Abeditho, Jules U. Upenjirwoth, Carine M. Aliang’o, Jean de Dieu N. Unega, Maurice M. Nigo, Didier Bakajika, Jean-Paul U. Uvoyo, Germain L. Mambandu, Christine M. Halleux, Michel Vaillant, Anna Schritz, Beatriz Mosqueira, Mupenzi Mumbere, Sally Kinrade, Annette C. Kuesel

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s13071-025-07199-8 · 2026-03-16

## TL;DR

This study compares the prevalence and intensity of Onchocerca volvulus infection in two regions of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2010 and 2021–2023, finding a significant decline that may be due to reduced vector biting rates.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the decline of Onchocerca volvulus infection in areas without ivermectin treatment, suggesting environmental factors may be responsible.

## Key findings

- Infection prevalence dropped from 23.3% to 89.8% in Logo Health Zone between 2010 and 2021–2023.
- Microfilariae density decreased significantly, with mean values dropping from 24.30 to 1.1 in Logo Health Zone.
- The reduction in infection is likely due to decreased vector biting rates, possibly linked to land-use changes.

## Abstract

In Ituri Province, 7576 and 1056 volunteers living in Logo and Nyarambe Health Zone (HZ), respectively, were screened in 2021–2023 for two studies comparing moxidectin and ivermectin in individuals with ≥ 0 Onchocerca volvulus skin microfilariae density (SmfD, microfilariae/mg skin). Site selection was based on the trial capacity established for the moxidectin Phase 3 study and SmfD measured among 1373 and 36 individuals screened in HZ Logo and Nyarambe, respectively, in 2010. We compared the SmfD measured in 2010 and 2021–2023 in Logo HZ where ivermectin mass administration was never implemented and provide descriptive statistics for SmfD from Nyarambe HZ.

Four skin snips from each consenting/assenting individual ≥ 12 years old were weighed and incubated in isotonic saline for ≥ 8 h. Emerged microfilariae were counted and SmfD calculated as the mean of the microfilariae/mg skin of each snip. Other data collected included age, gender, village of residence, and history of ivermectin treatment.

In 2010 and 2021–2023, respectively, adults (18–93 years old) represented 92.1% and 73.2%, and women 36.9% and 46.6% of the 1373 and 7547 volunteers from Logo HZ without reported prior ivermectin treatment. Among these adults and adolescents (12–17 years), no microfilariae were detected in snips from 23.3% and 26.9% in 2010 and 89.8% and 96.8% in 2021–2023, respectively, with mean ± standard deviation SmfD being 24.30 ± 35.52 and 11.8 ± 18.37 in 2010 and 1.1 ± 6.44 and 0.3 ± 2.62 in 2021–2023, respectively.

Given that the reduction in infection prevalence and intensity in Logo HZ cannot be attributed to ivermectin distribution, it has to be due to reduction in infective vector biting rates, possibly linked to a recently proposed change in vector species triggered by land-use changes. Because SmfD reflects transmission events approximately 2–15 years earlier, infective vector biting rate assessment is needed to determine current transmission rates. Reduced transmission shifts macrofilariae age distribution toward older macrofilariae with lower reproductive capacity. Comparison of the results from the Phase 3 and the ongoing efficacy study might help determine whether drug susceptibility changes significantly with macrofilariae age. Should that be the case, transmission models evaluating the impact of mass drug administrations could be adjusted.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13071-025-07199-8.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** moxidectin (PubChem CID 9832912)
- **Diseases:** Onchocerca volvulus infection (MONDO:0017137)
- **Species:** Onchocerca volvulus (taxon 6282)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Tropical Diseases (MESH:D015493), Simulium-borne parasitic disease (MESH:D010272), LF (MESH:D004605), infected (MESH:D007239), river blindness (MESH:D015827), HZ (MESH:D020179), epilepsy (MESH:D004827), Neglected Tropical Diseases (MESH:D058069), O. volvulus (MESH:D045822), APOC (MESH:D009855)
- **Chemicals:** MDA (MESH:D015104), G-FDA (-), Moxidectin (MESH:C027837), albendazole (MESH:D015766), Ivermectin (MESH:D007559)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Simulium dentulosum (species) [taxon 2726002], Onchocerca volvulus (species) [taxon 6282], Simulium vorax (species) [taxon 103623]

## Figures

8 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13037001/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13037001