The consensus drug of choice for the treatment of uncomplicated strongyloidiasis is
ivermectin. However, even if it is considered the main drug of choice, recent studies have illustrated the challenges in ivermectin curing strongyloidiasis. Ivermectin does not kill the
Strongyloides larvae, only the adult worms, therefore repeat dosing may be necessary to properly eradicate the infection. There is an auto-infective cycle of roughly two weeks during which ivermectin should be re-administered; however, additional dosing may still be necessary as it will not kill
Strongyloides in the blood or larvae deep within the bowels or diverticula. Other drugs that can be effective are
albendazole and
thiabendazole (25 mg/kg twice daily for 5 days—400 mg maximum (generally)). even after initial or inadequate sustained treatment. Continued treatment, blood, and stool monitoring thus may be necessary even if symptoms temporarily resolve. As cited earlier, since some infections are insidiously asymptomatic, and relatively expensive bloodwork is often inconclusive via false-positives or false-negatives, just as stool samples can be unreliable in diagnoses, there is yet no real gold standard for proof of cure, mirroring the lack of an efficient and reliable methodology of diagnosis. An objective eradication standard for strongyloidiasis is elusive given the high degree of suspicion needed to even begin treatment, the sometimes difficulty of the only definitive diagnostic criteria of detecting and isolating larvae or adult
Strongyloides, the importance of early diagnosis, particularly before steroid treatments, and the very wide variability and exclusion/inclusion of differing collections of diffuse symptoms. Disregarding mis-ascribing bonafide delusional parasitosis disorders, strongyloidiasis should be more well known among medical professionals and have serious consideration for broad educational campaigns in effected geographic locales both within the semi-tropical developed world and otherwise, as well as in the tropical developing world where, among many other neglected tropical diseases, it is endemic. Government programs are needed to help decontaminate endemic areas and to help affected populations from infection. Furthermore, progress is required in establishing financial support to facilitate and cover affordable medications for individuals in affected at-risk regions and communities to help continue treatments. There are conflicting reports on effective drug treatments. Ivermectin ineffectiveness and rising
drug resistance have been documented. Albendazole is noted by the
WHO as being the least effective. Thiabendazole can have severe side effects and is unavailable in many countries. Major inroads are required to advance the development of successful medications and drug protocols for strongyloidiasis and other neglected tropical diseases. Contagiousness via textiles, unlike
Enterobius vermicularis, is unfounded. As is, generally speaking, person-to-person contagiousness of asymptomatic and disseminated infection. It has rarely been transmitted through organ transplantation. Married
Vietnam War veterans who were infected, yet never developed significant hyperinfection, lived for multiple decades with non-debilitating disseminated infection, without treatment, with wives who failed to ever contract infection. Contraction occurs overwhelmingly from skin exposure to any contaminated soil, contaminated potting soil, contaminated waters, lack of sanitation, or environmental factors as potential vectors. Nearly never to extraordinarily very rarely documented is a transmission from person to person (besides from infected male homosexual sex), other than closeness of contact to the productive coughing of a very ill hyperinfected individual. It has been shown possible to occur in that situation, or potentially other similar scenarios, it is speculated via pulmonary secretions of a direly hyperinfected individual. In which case treatment for others may be indicated, if deemed necessary by proximity, symptoms, precautions, probable exposures to the same vectors, or through screening of serology and stool samples, until infection is eradicated. Before administering steroids at least somewhat screening for infection in even remotely potentially susceptible individuals to prevent escalating the infection is advised. As not doing so in certain cohorts can have extremely high mortality rates from inadvertently caused hyperinfection via immunosuppression of application of certain steroids. Thus extreme caution with respect to
iatrogenic risks is crucial to avoiding deaths or other adverse consequences in treatment, that of course prefigures a correct diagnosis. People with high exposure to
Strongyloides stercoralis may mitigate the risk of strongyloidiasis hyperinfection associated with corticosteroid treatment, with the presumptive use of ivermectin. Such hyperinfection has been a particular concern during the
COVID-19 pandemic because of the use of corticosteroids to treat COVID-19. The CDC and other international bodies recommend the use of ivermectin for refugees from areas that have a risk of strongyloidiasis. During the 1940s, the treatment of choice was enteric-coated tablets of 60 mg
gentian violet, three times daily, for 16 days. The cure rate was reported to be only about 50 to 70 percent, requiring repeat courses. It is possible the cure rate was even less than that published in the literature, due to the difficulty in positively diagnosing infection. ==Epidemiology==