Ivermectin Safe for Young Children: Breakthrough Trial Expands Disease Control Efforts

November 10, 2025
Ivermectin Safe for Young Children: Breakthrough Trial Expands Disease Control Efforts
  • A clinical trial presented at ASTMH 2025 in Toronto shows ivermectin can be safely given to very young children weighing as little as 5 kilograms, widening eligibility for mass drug administration against neglected tropical diseases.

  • The study aims to reassure regulators and manufacturers about safety of ivermectin in children under 15 kilograms, addressing prior safety gaps and potentially expanding MDA campaigns.

  • Beyond treatment, linking early ivermectin use with nutrition programs and malaria vector control could improve overall health outcomes in endemic regions.

  • Expanding use to smaller children could improve outcomes for intestinal helminth infections by addressing malnutrition, stunting, and cognitive impairment linked to chronic infection.

  • Reducing treatment exclusions may enhance malaria control, as ivermectin can lower transmission by affecting Anopheles mosquitoes, especially with broad MDA coverage around 70%.

  • Building on a prior systematic review and meta-analysis, the trial seeks to support broader inclusion of smaller children in MDA to reduce disease burden and transmission.

  • Removing weight-based barriers could accelerate control of onchocerciasis by enabling earlier intervention and potentially reducing immune-mediated neurological complications.

  • Endorsements from the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene and its leadership lend weight to the study’s implications for science and global health policy.

  • Broader eligibility could reach more children, supporting mass drug administration and accelerating control of multiple neglected tropical diseases.

  • Lead author Kevin Kobylinski notes that including small children in MDA could substantially reduce disease burden, with potential to influence malaria transmission when coverage nears 70%.

  • Widening age/weight eligibility could reduce scabies transmission, given the high disease burden among children and close-contact dynamics.

  • The trial used robust methods—double-blind randomization and multi-site monitoring—conducted with Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit to support generalizability.

Summary based on 3 sources


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