胃肠道寄生虫疫苗是兽医实践中预防医学的支柱:系统综述

Lina Maria Vargas Borda, Laura Daniela Prieto Prieto, Monica María Baquero Parra, Wilson Corredor Santamaria, Neuza Maria Alcantara Neves, Dumar Alexander Jaramillo Hernández
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景化:生产动物和宠物滥用驱虫药控制胃肠道寄生虫所引起的抗寄生虫耐药性已成为动物健康中最大的问题之一。因此,疫苗的使用可以通过控制新出现的人畜共患疾病和动物源性食源性病原体,从而改善公众健康,从而有益于动物的健康和福利。知识差距:兽医学专业人员了解控制某些胃肠道寄生虫的实验性疫苗的临床试验是相关的。这样,他们就可以站在下一代可用技术产品的前沿,从而能够控制对动物健康和公众健康的威胁。目的:对实验性疫苗在生产动物和宠物中的临床试验进行系统综述,以治疗与动物生产和/或公共卫生相关的胃肠道寄生虫引起的疾病。此外,它还介绍了目前在不同国家商业化的胃肠道抗寄生虫疫苗及其预防效果。方法:本系统综述遵循PRISMA方案。文章是从科学数据库中获得的,关键词如下:疫苗、临床试验、商业疫苗、寄生虫控制、胃肠道线虫、胃肠道寄生虫、胃肠道原生动物、猪蛔虫、钩虫、嗜癌库伯菌、细粒棘球蚴、艾美耳属、蓝氏贾第鞭毛虫、扭曲血蜱、,猪带绦虫和Teladorsagia包皮环切。本分析仅包括在鸟类、宠物、猪和反刍动物中进行的胃肠道抗寄生虫疫苗的临床试验,以及目前可用于这些寄生虫的商业疫苗。结果和结论:尽管在1964年至2020年期间,有关于这些动物物种(n=101)疫苗的重要临床试验研究报告,但只有五种寄生虫可以通过兽医使用的商业疫苗预防/控制:反刍动物的扭曲血蜱和细粒棘球蚴,猪的猪带绦虫,鸟类的艾美耳球虫属和狗的蓝氏贾第鞭毛虫属(例如Cysvax™, Barbervax®、Providean®Hidatil EG95、CocciVac®和GiardiVax™). 预计,随着生物信息学和反向疫苗学等方法的发展,这种免疫预防和免疫治疗范围将扩大,以控制这些对人类和动物健康至关重要的寄生虫。
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Vaccines for gastrointestinal parasites, a pillar of preventive medicine in veterinary practice: Systematic review
Contextualization: The antiparasitic resistance caused by the indiscriminate use of anthelmintic drugs for the control of gastrointestinal parasites in production animals and pets, has become one of the biggest problems in animal health. For this reason, the use of vaccines could benefit animal health and welfare by controlling emerging zoonotic diseases and foodborne pathogens of animal origin, thus improving public health. Knowledge gap: It is relevant for professionals in veterinary science to know the clinical trials of experimental vaccines for controlling certain gastrointestinal parasites.   This way, they can be at the forefront of the next available technological products and so, be able to control this menace to the animal health and public health.  Purpose: To do a systematic review of clinical trials for experimental vaccines in production animals and pets for diseases caused by gastrointestinal parasites of relevance in animal production and/or public health. Furthermore, it presents the current gastrointestinal antiparasitic vaccines commercialized in different countries and their prophylactic efficacy. Methodology: PRISMA protocols were followed for this systematic review. Articles were obtained from scientific databases with the following keywords: vaccines, clinical trials, commercial vaccines, parasites control, gastrointestinal nematodes, gastrointestinal cestodes, gastrointestinal protozoa, Ascaris suum, Ancylostoma caninum, Cooperia oncophora, Echinococcus granulosus, Eimeria spp., Giardia lamblia, Haemonchus contortus, Osteortagia osteortagi, Taenia solium and Teladorsagia circumcincta.  Only clinical trials of gastrointestinal antiparasitic vaccines in birds, pets, pigs and ruminants were included in this analysis, as well as commercial vaccines currently available for these same parasites.  Results and conclusions: Even though there are important clinical trial studies of vaccines in these animal species (n=101) reported between 1964 to 2020, only five parasites can be prevented/controlled with commercial vaccines used in veterinary medicine: Haemonchus contortus and Echinococcus granulosus in ruminants, Taenia solium in pigs, Eimeria spp. in birds and Giardia lamblia in dogs (e.g., Cysvax™, Barbervax®, Providean® Hidatil EG95, CocciVac® and GiardiaVax™). It is expected that, with the development of bioinformatics and methodologies such as reverse vaccinology, this immunoprophylactic and immunotherapeutic range will be extended as to control these parasitic agents of great importance in human and animal health.   
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