EDITORIALS

 

Yaws eradication: past efforts and future perspectives

 

 

Kingsley AsieduI,1; Bernard AmouzouII; Akshay DhariwalIII; Marc KaramIV; Derek LoboV; Sarat PatnaikVI; André MeheusVII

IDepartment of Control of Neglected Tropical Diseases, World Health Organization, 20 avenue Appia, 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland
IIRetired, Lomé, Togo
IIIDepartment of Parasitic Diseases, National Institute of Communicable Diseases, Delhi, India
IVRetired, Crozet, France
VRetired, Mangalore, India
VINational Institute of Communicable Diseases, Rajahmundry, India
VIIEpidemiology and Social Medicine, University of Antwerp, Belgium

 

 

Yaws, a disease primarily affecting skin, bones and cartilage, is caused by Treponema pallidum subspecies pertenue. Together with bejel (endemic syphilis) and pinta, these diseases constitute the group of the endemic treponematoses.1 If left untreated, yaws leads to crippling and disfiguring consequences.2

Between 1952 and 1964, WHO and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) led a worldwide campaign to control and eventually eradicate yaws and other endemic treponematoses.3 This was a major disease control effort undertaken by WHO just after its establishment in 1948.4 Control programmes were established in 46 countries and, by the end of 1964, the number of cases had been reduced from 50 million to 2.5 million (a 95% reduction).5 The yaws control efforts paved the way for the development of the primary health care system in affected areas.6 In the late 1960s, there was a shift in strategy from the vertical programme to integration of yaws surveillance and control into primary health care to tackle the remaining 5% of cases. However, this approach did not succeed.

By the end of the 1970s, re-emergence of yaws in many countries prompted a World Health Assembly Resolution requesting the implementation of integrated treponematoses control programmes.7 Renewed control efforts were implemented in several countries, e.g. Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Mali, the Niger and Togo, but these efforts were not sustained. In 1984, a global meeting was organized in Washington, DC,8 followed by regional meetings with the aim of reviving eradication activities. These attempts were half-hearted and the goal of eradication remained elusive.9 At this time, most of the yaws programmes had been integrated into primary health care which were generally too weak to implement the activities of a vertical programme.10

In 1995, WHO estimated the number of infectious cases to be 460 000 worldwide of which, 400 000 were in west and central Africa, 50 000 in South-East Asia and the rest in other tropical regions.11 The South-East Asia Region of WHO kept yaws high on its agenda and set the goal of regional eradication by 2012 in its two remaining endemic countries – Indonesia and Timor-Leste. Since 2004, India has reported no new cases.12 In the Western Pacific Region, three countries remain endemic – Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu.

The main lessons learned from the past are that yaws can be eliminated with sustained efforts as shown in many countries and recently in India; however, success can also lead to complacency and neglect. Once the goal and timeframe are set, political will and donor commitment need to be sustained until transmission is interrupted. Health services with adequate outreach activities to remote communities are pivotal for effective disease control efforts. The elimination of a disease from one geographical area is not a guarantee against its re-introduction.

But all is not lost: benzathine penicillin is still very effective, safe, cheap and readily available. It offers a remarkable cure in a single injection which reinforces high community confidence and participation in yaws activities. Today, the favourable environment for neglected tropical diseases may help with visibility and mobilization of resources to tackle yaws, and it provides the possibility to integrate yaws activities into other programmes. Additional opportunities and resources for health system strengthening, global health initiatives and renewed interest in primary health care may further facilitate elimination efforts.

However, challenges in reviving yaws control remain. The disease is no longer perceived as a priority by national health policy-makers. Furthermore, knowledge and skills of health workers to diagnose and manage yaws have waned. Accessibility to affected populations in remote areas is a challenge. Finally, the risk of penicillin resistance remains,13 hence alternative antibiotics should be explored.

In retrospect, the world should have dealt a final blow to yaws in the late 1960s and the 1970s. Today's favourable environment in health and development provides an opportunity to revive elimination efforts. Presently, the problem of yaws is relatively small; justification for action should not only be based on number of cases but also on humanitarian grounds as the disease affects poor and underserved populations. The International Task Force on Disease Eradication strongly recommended that WHO and UNICEF take the lead in addressing this highly curable and preventable neglected tropical disease.14

The 60th anniversary of WHO is an opportunity for governments of the remaining endemic countries and the international community to reflect on the continued existence of yaws and to encourage and support renewed efforts to eliminate the disease.

 

References

Available at: http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/86/7/08-055608/en/index.html

1. Perine PL, Hopkins DR, Niemel PLA, St John RK, Causse G, Antal GM. Handbook of endemic treponematoses: Yaws, endemic syphilis and pinta. Geneva: WHO; 1984.         

2. Antal GM, Lukehart SA, Meheus A. Review: the endemic treponematoses. Microbes Infect 2002;4:83-94. PMID:11825779 doi:10.1016/S1286-4579(01)01513-1        

3. Guthe T, Willcox RR. Treponematoses: a world problem. WHO Chron 1954; 8:37-113.         

4. Four decades of achievement: 1948-1988. Highlights of the work of WHO. Geneva: WHO; 1988. pp. 1-2.         

5. Antal GM, Causse G. The control of endemic treponematoses. Rev Infect Dis 1985;7 Suppl. 2;S220-6. PMID:4012161        

6. Troupin JL, Reynolds FW, Guthe T. Yaws control - an opportunity for promoting rural health services. Bull World Health Organ 1953;8:355-64. PMID:13042586        

7. Control of endemic treponematoses. World Health Assembly Resolution WHA 31.58. Geneva: WHO; 1978.         

8. Burke JP, Hopkins DR, Hume JC, Perine PL, St John R. International symposium on yaws and other endemic treponematoses. Rev Infect Dis 1985;7 Suppl. 2;S217-351. PMID:4012160        

9. Meheus A, Antal GM. The endemic treponematoses: not yet eradicated. Wld hlth statist quart 1992;45:228-37.         

10. Meheus A. Integration of yaws control and primary health care. Rev Infect Dis 1985;7 Suppl. 2;S284-8. PMID:4012174        

11. Informal consultation on endemic treponematoses. Geneva: WHO (WHO/EMC/95.3).         

12. Elimination of yaws in India. Wkly Epidemiol Rec 2008;83:125-32. PMID:18404831        

13. Backhouse JL, Hudson BJ, Hamilton PA, Nesteroff SI. Failure of penicillin treatment of yaws on Karkar Island, Papua New Guinea. Am J Trop Med Hyg 1998;59:388-92. PMID:9749630        

14. Meeting of the international task force for disease eradication - 11 October 2007. Wkly Epidemiol Rec 2008;83:77-81. PMID:18309578        

 

 

1 Correspondence to Kingsley Asiedu (e-mail: asieduk@who.int).
doi:10.2471/BLT.08.055608

World Health Organization Genebra - Genebra - Switzerland
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