Taking the strain out of onchocerciasis? A reanalysis of blindness and transmission data does not support the existence of a savannah blinding strain of onchocerciasis in West Africa.

3区 医学 Q1 Immunology and Microbiology Advances in Parasitology Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-03-03 DOI:10.1016/bs.apar.2021.01.002
Robert A Cheke, Kirsty E Little, Stephen Young, Martin Walker, Maria-Gloria Basáñez
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Onchocerciasis (also known as 'river blindness'), is a neglected tropical disease (NTD) caused by the (Simulium-transmitted) filarial nematode Onchocerca volvulus. The occurrence of 'blinding' (savannah) and non-blinding (forest) parasite strains and the existence of corresponding, locally adapted Onchocerca-Simulium complexes were postulated to explain greater blindness prevalence in savannah than in forest foci. As a result, the World Health Organization (WHO) Onchocerciasis Control Programme in West Africa (OCP) focused anti-vectorial and anti-parasitic interventions in savannah endemic areas. In this paper, village-level data on blindness prevalence, microfilarial prevalence, and transmission intensity (measured by the annual transmission potential, the number of infective, L3, larvae per person per year) were extracted from 16 West-Central Africa-based publications, and analysed according to habitat (forest, forest-savannah mosaic, savannah) to test the dichotomous strain hypothesis in relation to blindness. When adjusting for sample size, there were no statistically significant differences in blindness prevalence between the habitats (one-way ANOVA, P=0.68, mean prevalence for forest=1.76±0.37 (SE); mosaic=1.49±0.38; savannah=1.89±0.26). The well-known relationship between blindness prevalence and annual transmission potential for savannah habitats was confirmed and shown to hold for (but not to be statistically different from) forest foci (excluding data from southern Côte d'Ivoire, in which blindness prevalence was significantly lower than in other West African forest communities, but which had been the focus of studies leading to the strain-blindness hypothesis that was accepted by OCP planners). We conclude that the evidence for a savannah blinding onchocerciasis strain in simple contrast with a non-blinding forest strain is equivocal. A re-appraisal of the strain hypothesis to explain patterns of ocular disease is needed to improve understanding of onchocerciasis epidemiology and disease burden estimates in the light of the WHO 2030 goals for onchocerciasis.

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清除盘尾丝虫病的毒株?对致盲和传播数据的重新分析不支持西非存在草原致盲盘尾丝虫病毒株。
盘尾丝虫病(也称为“河盲症”)是一种被忽视的热带病(NTD),由(由模拟虫传播的)盘尾丝虫病引起。“致盲”(热带草原)和非致盲(森林)寄生虫菌株的发生以及相应的、适应当地的盘尾丝虫病复合体的存在被认为可以解释热带草原的致盲率高于森林疫源地。因此,世界卫生组织(卫生组织)西非盘尾丝虫病控制方案(盘尾丝虫病控制方案)将重点放在大草原流行地区的抗病媒和抗寄生虫干预措施上。本文从16份中西部非洲出版物中提取了村庄层面的失明患病率、微丝虫患病率和传播强度(以年传播潜力、感染数、L3、每人每年幼虫数衡量)数据,并根据栖息地(森林、森林-草原马赛克、草原)进行分析,以检验与失明有关的二分类菌株假设。在调整样本量后,不同生境间的失明患病率差异无统计学意义(单因素方差分析,P=0.68,森林平均患病率=1.76±0.37 (SE);马赛克= 1.49±0.38;萨凡纳= 1.89±0.26)。众所周知的大草原生境失明流行率与年传播潜力之间的关系得到证实,并显示出森林焦点(但在统计上与森林焦点没有差异)(不包括来自Côte科特迪瓦南部的数据,那里的失明流行率明显低于其他西非森林社区,但它一直是研究的重点,导致了被OCP规划者接受的毒株失明假说)。我们得出结论,草原致盲盘尾丝虫病菌株与非致盲森林菌株的简单对比证据是模棱两可的。根据世卫组织2030年盘尾丝虫病目标,需要对解释眼部疾病模式的毒株假说进行重新评估,以提高对盘尾丝虫病流行病学和疾病负担估计的理解。
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来源期刊
Advances in Parasitology
Advances in Parasitology 医学-寄生虫学
CiteScore
9.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Advances in Parasitology is recognised as a leading review serial which is consistently well placed in terms of impact factor and citations. Major reviews on all aspects of medical, veterinary and wild-life parasitology are considered. The journal provides an outlet for authoritative reviews from experts in the field. While emphasis is given to modern molecular approaches contributions across all disciplines are encouraged including traditional areas such as ecology and taxonomy. Eclectic volumes are supplemented by thematic volumes dedicated to a particular topic of recognised interest and importance.
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