Etienne Gignoux
Médecins Sans Frontières
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Featured researches published by Etienne Gignoux.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2016
Etienne Gignoux; Andrew S. Azman; Martin De Smet; Philippe Azuma; Moses Massaquoi; Dorian Job; Amanda Tiffany; Roberta Petrucci; Esther Sterk; Julien Potet; Motoi Suzuki; Andreas Kurth; Angela Cannas; Anne Bocquin; Thomas Strecker; Christopher H. Logue; Thomas Pottage; Constanze Yue; Jean Clement Cabrol; Micaela Serafini; Iza Ciglenecki
BACKGROUND Malaria treatment is recommended for patients with suspected Ebola virus disease (EVD) in West Africa, whether systeomatically or based on confirmed malaria diagnosis. At the Ebola treatment center in Foya, Lofa County, Liberia, the supply of artemether-lumefantrine, a first-line antimalarial combination drug, ran out for a 12-day period in August 2014. During this time, patients received the combination drug artesunate-amodiaquine; amodiaquine is a compound with anti-Ebola virus activity in vitro. No other obvious change in the care of patients occurred during this period. METHODS We fit unadjusted and adjusted regression models to standardized patient-level data to estimate the risk ratio for death among patients with confirmed EVD who were prescribed artesunate-amodiaquine (artesunate-amodiaquine group), as compared with those who were prescribed artemether-lumefantrine (artemether-lumefantrine group) and those who were not prescribed any antimalarial drug (no-antimalarial group). RESULTS Between June 5 and October 24, 2014, a total of 382 patients with confirmed EVD were admitted to the Ebola treatment center in Foya. At admission, 194 patients were prescribed artemether-lumefantrine and 71 were prescribed artesunate-amodiaquine. The characteristics of the patients in the artesunate-amodiaquine group were similar to those in the artemether-lumefantrine group and those in the no-antimalarial group. A total of 125 of the 194 patients in the artemether-lumefantrine group (64.4%) died, as compared with 36 of the 71 patients in the artesunate-amodiaquine group (50.7%). In adjusted analyses, the artesunate-amodiaquine group had a 31% lower risk of death than the artemether-lumefantrine group (risk ratio, 0.69; 95% confidence interval, 0.54 to 0.89), with a stronger effect observed among patients without malaria. CONCLUSIONS Patients who were prescribed artesunate-amodiaquine had a lower risk of death from EVD than did patients who were prescribed artemether-lumefantrine. However, our analyses cannot exclude the possibility that artemether-lumefantrine is associated with an increased risk of death or that the use of artesunate-amodiaquine was associated with unmeasured patient characteristics that directly altered the risk of death.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2017
Sebastian Funk; Iza Ciglenecki; Amanda Tiffany; Etienne Gignoux; Anton Camacho; Rosalind M. Eggo; Adam J. Kucharski; W. John Edmunds; Josephus Bolongei; Phillip Azuma; Peter Clement; Tamba Alpha; Esther Sterk; Barbara Telfer; Gregory Engel; Lucy Anne Parker; Motoi Suzuki; Nico Heijenberg; Bruce Reeder
The Ebola epidemic in West Africa was stopped by an enormous concerted effort of local communities and national and international organizations. It is not clear, however, how much the public health response and behavioural changes in affected communities, respectively, contributed to ending the outbreak. Here, we analyse the epidemic in Lofa County, Liberia, lasting from March to November 2014, by reporting a comprehensive time line of events and estimating the time-varying transmission intensity using a mathematical model of Ebola transmission. Model fits to the epidemic show an alternation of peaks and troughs in transmission, consistent with highly heterogeneous spread. This is combined with an overall decline in the reproduction number of Ebola transmission from early August, coinciding with an expansion of the local Ebola treatment centre. We estimate that healthcare seeking approximately doubled over the course of the outbreak, and that isolation of those seeking healthcare reduced their reproduction number by 62% (mean estimate, 95% credible interval (CI) 59–66). Both expansion of bed availability and improved healthcare seeking contributed to ending the epidemic, highlighting the importance of community engagement alongside clinical intervention. This article is part of the themed issue ‘The 2013–2016 West African Ebola epidemic: data, decision-making and disease control’.
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2016
Anna Kuehne; Emily Lynch; Esaie Marshall; Amanda Tiffany; Ian Alley; Luke Bawo; Moses Massaquoi; Claudia Lodesani; Philippe Le Vaillant; Klaudia Porten; Etienne Gignoux
Between March 2014 and July 2015 at least 10,500 Ebola cases including more than 4,800 deaths occurred in Liberia, the majority in Monrovia. However, official numbers may have underestimated the size of the outbreak. Closure of health facilities and mistrust in existing structures may have additionally impacted on all-cause morbidity and mortality. To quantify mortality and morbidity and describe health-seeking behaviour in Monrovia, Médecins sans Frontières (MSF) conducted a mobile phone survey from December 2014 to March 2015. We drew a random sample of households in Monrovia and conducted structured mobile phone interviews, covering morbidity, mortality and health-seeking behaviour from 14 May 2014 until the day of the survey. We defined an Ebola-related death as any death meeting the Liberian Ebola case definition. We calculated all-cause and Ebola-specific mortality rates. The sample consisted of 6,813 household members in 905 households. We estimated a crude mortality rate (CMR) of 0.33/10,000 persons/day (95%CI:0.25–0.43) and an Ebola-specific mortality rate of 0.06/10,000 persons/day (95%-CI:0.03–0.11). During the recall period, 17 Ebola cases were reported including those who died. In the 30 days prior to the survey 277 household members were reported sick; malaria accounted for 54% (150/277). Of the sick household members, 43% (122/276) did not visit any health care facility. The mobile phone-based survey was found to be a feasible and acceptable alternative method when data collection in the community is impossible. CMR was estimated well below the emergency threshold of 1/10,000 persons/day. Non-Ebola-related mortality in Monrovia was not higher than previous national estimates of mortality for Liberia. However, excess mortality directly resulting from Ebola did occur in the population. Importantly, the small proportion of sick household members presenting to official health facilities when sick might pose a challenge for future outbreak detection and mitigation. Substantial reported health-seeking behaviour outside of health facilities may also suggest the need for adapted health messaging and improved access to health care.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Etienne Gignoux; Jonathan Polonsky; Iza Ciglenecki; Mathieu Bichet; Matthew E. Coldiron; Enoch Thuambe Lwiyo; Innocent Akonda; Micaela Serafini; Klaudia Porten
In 2013, a large measles epidemic occurred in the Aketi Health Zone of the Democratic Republic of Congo. We conducted a two-stage, retrospective cluster survey to estimate the attack rate, the case fatality rate, and the measles-specific mortality rate during the epidemic. 1424 households containing 7880 individuals were included. The estimated attack rate was 14.0%, (35.0% among children aged <5 years). The estimated case fatality rate was 4.2% (6.1% among children aged <5 years). Spatial analysis and linear regression showed that younger children, those who did not receive care, and those living farther away from Aketi Hospital early in the epidemic had a higher risk of measles related death. Vaccination coverage prior to the outbreak was low (76%), and a delayed reactive vaccination campaign contributed to the high attack rate. We provide evidences suggesting that a comprehensive case management approach reduced measles fatality during this epidemic in rural, inaccessible resource-poor setting.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2017
Andrew S. Azman; Malika Bouhenia; Anita S. Iyer; John Rumunu; Richard Lino Laku; Joseph F. Wamala; Isabel Rodriguez-Barraquer; Justin Lessler; Etienne Gignoux; Francisco J. Luquero; Daniel T. Leung; Iza Ciglenecki
F1000Research | 2018
Roberta Petrucci; Etienne Gignoux; Mathieu Bastard; Patricia Kahn; Jay Achar; Iza Ciglenecki; Micaela Serafini
Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2018
Nicolas Peyraud; Michel Quere; Geraldine Duc; Corinne Chèvre; Theo Wanteu; Souheil Reache; Thierry Dumont; Robin Nesbitt; Ellen Dahl; Etienne Gignoux; Manuel Albela; Anna Righetti; Marie-Claude Bottineau; Jean-Clément Cabrol; Micaela Sarafini; Samuel Nzalapan; Pauline Lechevalier; Clotilde Rambaud; Monica Rull
Archive | 2017
Sebastian Funk; Iza Ciglenecki; Amanda Tiffany; Etienne Gignoux; Anton Camacho; Rosalind M. Eggo; Adam J. Kucharski; W. John Edmunds; Josephus Bolongei; Phillip Azuma; Peter Clement; Alpha Tamba; Esther Sterk; Barbara Telfer; Gregory Engel; Lucy Anne Parker; Motoi Suzuki; Nico Heijenberg; Bruce Reeder
F1000Research | 2017
Franck Ale; Bahya-Batinda Dang; Kaouther Chammam; Moussa Ousmane; Dorian Job; Géza Harczi; Klaudia Porten; Iza Ciglenecki; Hugues Robert-Nicoud; Florent Uzzeni; Etienne Gignoux
F1000Research | 2016
Mohamad K Haidar; Etienne Gignoux; Tricia Newport; Luis Francisco Neira; Iza Ciglenecki; Barbara Rusch; John Rumunu; Klaudia Porten; Gabriel Alcoba