|
|
Prevalence and clinical relevance of helminth co-infections among tuberculosis patients in urban Tanzania
|
|
|
|
|
نویسنده
|
mhimbira f. ,hella j. ,said k. ,kamwela l. ,sasamalo m. ,maroa t. ,chiryamkubi m. ,mhalu g. ,schindler c. ,reither k. ,knopp s. ,utzinger j. ,gagneux s. ,fenner l.
|
منبع
|
plos neglected tropical diseases - 2017 - دوره : 11 - شماره : 2
|
چکیده
|
Background: helminth infections can negatively affect the immunologic host control,which may increase the risk of progression from latent mycobacterium tuberculosis infection to tuberculosis (tb) disease and alter the clinical presentation of tb. we assessed the prevalence and determined the clinical relevance of helminth co-infection among tb patients and household contact controls in urban tanzania. methodology: between november 2013 and october 2015,we enrolled adult (≥18 years) sputum smear-positive tb patients and household contact controls without tb during an ongoing tb cohort study in dar es salaam,tanzania. we used baermann,flotac,kato-katz,point-of-care circulating cathodic antigen,and urine filtration to diagnose helminth infections. multivariable logistic regression models with and without random effects for households were used to assess for associations between helminth infection and tb. principal findings: a total of 597 tb patients and 375 household contact controls were included. the median age was 33 years and 60.2% (585/972) were men. the prevalence of any helminth infection among tb patients was 31.8% (190/597) and 25.9% (97/375) among controls. strongyloides stercoralis was the predominant helminth species (16.6%,161),followed by hookworm (9.0%,87) and schistosoma mansoni (5.7%,55). an infection with any helminth was not associated with tb (adjusted odds ratio (aor) 1.26,95% confidence interval (ci): 0.88–1.80,p = 0.22),but s. mansoni infection was (aor 2.15,95% ci: 1.03–4.45,p = 0.040). moreover,s. mansoni infection was associated with lower sputum bacterial load (aor 2.63,95% ci: 1.38–5.26,p = 0.004) and tended to have fewer lung cavitations (aor 0.41,95% ci: 0.12–1.16,p = 0.088). conclusions/significance: s. mansoni infection was an independent risk factor for active tb and altered the clinical presentation in tb patients. these findings suggest a role for schistosomiasis in modulating the pathogenesis of human tb. treatment of helminths should be considered in clinical management of tb and tb control programs. © 2017 mhimbira et al.
|
|
|
آدرس
|
department of intervention and clinical trials,ifakara health institute,dar es salaam,tanzania,department of medical parasitology and infection biology,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel,switzerland,university of basel,basel, Switzerland, department of intervention and clinical trials,ifakara health institute,dar es salaam,tanzania,department of medical parasitology and infection biology,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel,switzerland,university of basel,basel, Switzerland, department of intervention and clinical trials,ifakara health institute,dar es salaam,tanzania,department of medical parasitology and infection biology,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel,switzerland,university of basel,basel, Switzerland, department of intervention and clinical trials,ifakara health institute,dar es salaam, Tanzania, department of intervention and clinical trials,ifakara health institute,dar es salaam,tanzania,department of medical parasitology and infection biology,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel,switzerland,university of basel,basel, Switzerland, department of intervention and clinical trials,ifakara health institute,dar es salaam, Tanzania, department of curative services,ministry of health,community development,gender,elderly and children,dar es salaam, Tanzania, department of intervention and clinical trials,ifakara health institute,dar es salaam,tanzania,department of medical parasitology and infection biology,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel,switzerland,university of basel,basel, Switzerland, university of basel,basel,switzerland,department of epidemiology and public health,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel, Switzerland, department of intervention and clinical trials,ifakara health institute,dar es salaam,tanzania,department of medical parasitology and infection biology,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel,switzerland,university of basel,basel, Switzerland, university of basel,basel,switzerland,department of epidemiology and public health,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel,switzerland,wolfson wellcome biomedical laboratories,department of life sciences,natural history museum,london, United Kingdom, university of basel,basel,switzerland,department of epidemiology and public health,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel, Switzerland, department of medical parasitology and infection biology,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel,switzerland,university of basel,basel, Switzerland, department of intervention and clinical trials,ifakara health institute,dar es salaam,tanzania,department of medical parasitology and infection biology,swiss tropical and public health institute,basel,switzerland,university of basel,basel,switzerland,institute of social and preventive medicine,university of bern,bern, Switzerland
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Authors
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|