@article{10.1371/journal.pntd.0002584, doi = {10.1371/journal.pntd.0002584}, author = {Chu, Brian K. AND Deming, Michael AND Biritwum, Nana-Kwadwo AND Bougma, Windtaré R. AND Dorkenoo, Améyo M. AND El-Setouhy, Maged AND Fischer, Peter U. AND Gass, Katherine AND Gonzalez de Peña, Manuel AND Mercado-Hernandez, Leda AND Kyelem, Dominique AND Lammie, Patrick J. AND Flueckiger, Rebecca M. AND Mwingira, Upendo J. AND Noordin, Rahmah AND Offei Owusu, Irene AND Ottesen, Eric A. AND Pavluck, Alexandre AND Pilotte, Nils AND Rao, Ramakrishna U. AND Samarasekera, Dilhani AND Schmaedick, Mark A. AND Settinayake, Sunil AND Simonsen, Paul E. AND Supali, Taniawati AND Taleo, Fasihah AND Torres, Melissa AND Weil, Gary J. AND Won, Kimberly Y.}, journal = {PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {Transmission Assessment Surveys (TAS) to Define Endpoints for Lymphatic Filariasis Mass Drug Administration: A Multicenter Evaluation}, year = {2013}, month = {12}, volume = {7}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0002584}, pages = {1-12}, abstract = {Background Lymphatic filariasis (LF) is targeted for global elimination through treatment of entire at-risk populations with repeated annual mass drug administration (MDA). Essential for program success is defining and confirming the appropriate endpoint for MDA when transmission is presumed to have reached a level low enough that it cannot be sustained even in the absence of drug intervention. Guidelines advanced by WHO call for a transmission assessment survey (TAS) to determine if MDA can be stopped within an LF evaluation unit (EU) after at least five effective rounds of annual treatment. To test the value and practicality of these guidelines, a multicenter operational research trial was undertaken in 11 countries covering various geographic and epidemiological settings. Methodology The TAS was conducted twice in each EU with TAS-1 and TAS-2 approximately 24 months apart. Lot quality assurance sampling (LQAS) formed the basis of the TAS survey design but specific EU characteristics defined the survey site (school or community), eligible population (6–7 year olds or 1st–2nd graders), survey type (systematic or cluster-sampling), target sample size, and critical cutoff (a statistically powered threshold below which transmission is expected to be no longer sustainable). The primary diagnostic tools were the immunochromatographic (ICT) test for W. bancrofti EUs and the BmR1 test (Brugia Rapid or PanLF) for Brugia spp. EUs. Principal Findings/Conclusions In 10 of 11 EUs, the number of TAS-1 positive cases was below the critical cutoff, indicating that MDA could be stopped. The same results were found in the follow-up TAS-2, therefore, confirming the previous decision outcome. Sample sizes were highly sex and age-representative and closely matched the target value after factoring in estimates of non-participation. The TAS was determined to be a practical and effective evaluation tool for stopping MDA although its validity for longer-term post-MDA surveillance requires further investigation.}, number = {12}, }