Setting the stage for a Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis: the first 125 years (1875-2000)

Int Health. 2020 Dec 22;13(Suppl 1):S3-S9. doi: 10.1093/inthealth/ihaa061.

Abstract

The development of the World Health Organization's Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis (GPELF) can be interpreted through many different lenses-e.g. one focusing on the health or economic plight of affected individuals and populations, another tracking the individuals and organizations responsible for building the programme or, as in this review, one identifying each of the critical requirements and specific hurdles that need to be addressed in order to successfully construct the programme. For almost 75 y after the life cycle of LF was first described, the principal tool for countering it was vector control. Discovery that diethylcarbamazine (and later ivermectin and albendazole) could effectively treat affected and at-risk populations, along with the availability of a simple, field-based diagnostic test to monitor programme progress, provided the essential tools for LF elimination. Recognition of this potential by the global health community (including the World Health Assembly) led two pharmaceutical companies (GlaxoSmithKline and Merck) to make enormous, unprecedented donations of albendazole and ivermectin to achieve this goal. Additional resource support from the public and private sectors and from health ministries in the 80 LF-endemic countries led to the creation of a Global Alliance to Eliminate LF, which launched the GPELF in 2000, just 125 y after the LF life cycle was first described.

Keywords: DEC; Global Programme to Eliminate Lymphatic Filariasis; World Health Organization; albendazole; ivermectin; lymphatic filariasis.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Albendazole / therapeutic use
  • Diethylcarbamazine / therapeutic use
  • Elephantiasis, Filarial* / drug therapy
  • Elephantiasis, Filarial* / epidemiology
  • Elephantiasis, Filarial* / prevention & control
  • Filaricides* / therapeutic use
  • Humans
  • Ivermectin / therapeutic use

Substances

  • Filaricides
  • Ivermectin
  • Albendazole
  • Diethylcarbamazine