Moreira Edson Duarte, Mendes de Souza Verena Maria, Sreenivasan Meera, Nascimento Eliane Góes, Pontes de Carvalho Lain
Centro de Pesquisas Gonçalo Moniz, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Rua Waldemar Falcão 121, Salvador, Bahia CEP 40295-001, Brazil.
Vet Parasitol. 2004 Aug 6;122(4):245-52. doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2004.05.019.
In Brazil, zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis (ZVL) control programs based on the mass elimination of seropositive dogs have failed to reduce the number of leishmaniasis cases. However, these programs have been done under sub-optimal conditions. We studied a cohort of dogs in an urban area in Brazil to determine, whether a dog-culling program optimized with: (i) replacement of a relatively low-sensitivity indirect immune-fluorescent test on blood eluate by a more sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay on serum blood samples; (ii) shortening of the time interval from serodiagnosis to removal of dogs; (iii) screening a high proportion of the dog population could reduce the incidence of canine Leishmania infection (CLI). The study ran from December 1997 to July 2000, with four follow-up assessments performed at approximately 8-month intervals. All dogs seropositive for anti-Leishmania antibodies were promptly eliminated. A large number of new dogs immigrated to the study area throughout the study period. They comprised 43.8-49.8% of the cohort at each follow-up assessment, and upto 15% of them already had Leishmania infection. Overall, 42 news cases of CLI were identified, for a crude incidence rate of 11.8 cases per 100 dog-years (95% CI 8.6-15.6). In the first, second, third and fourth follow-up assessments the incidence rates were 8.2 (95% CI 3.0-17.9), 12.2 (95% CI 6.3-21.2), 16.4 (95% CI 8.5-28.6) and 13.6 (95% CI 7.1-23.8), respectively. There was no statistically significant change in these rates throughout the study period. Our results suggest that dog-culling programs do not reduce the incidence of CLI, even with an optimized intervention. Possible reasons for this failure include: currently available serologic methods lack sufficient sensitivity and/or specificity to accurately identify all infected dogs warranting removal in order to prevent Leishmania transmission; destroyed dogs are immediately replaced by susceptible puppies, and quite often, by already infected dogs; and other reservoirs may be involved in maintaining canine infection. Further efforts on ZVL control should be directed to developing new strategies or to testing control methods already in place with properly designed trials.
在巴西,基于大规模扑杀血清反应阳性犬只的人畜共患内脏利什曼病(ZVL)控制项目未能减少利什曼病病例数量。然而,这些项目是在非最佳条件下开展的。我们对巴西一个市区的一群犬只进行了研究,以确定一个经过优化的犬只扑杀项目是否能够降低犬类利什曼原虫感染(CLI)的发病率,该项目的优化措施包括:(i)用对血清血样更敏感的酶联免疫吸附测定法替代对血液洗脱液相对低灵敏度的间接免疫荧光检测;(ii)缩短从血清学诊断到扑杀犬只之间的时间间隔;(iii)对很大比例的犬类群体进行筛查。该研究从1997年12月持续至2000年7月,每隔约8个月进行4次随访评估。所有抗利什曼原虫抗体血清反应阳性的犬只均被立即扑杀。在整个研究期间,大量新犬只迁入研究区域。在每次随访评估中,它们占犬群的43.8 - 49.8%,其中高达15%的犬只已经感染了利什曼原虫。总体而言,共确诊42例新的CLI病例,粗发病率为每100犬年11.8例(95%置信区间8.6 - 15.6)。在第一次、第二次、第三次和第四次随访评估中,发病率分别为8.2(95%置信区间3.0 - 17.9)、12.2(95%置信区间6.3 - 21.2)、16.4(95%置信区间8.5 - 28.6)和13.6(95%置信区间7.1 - 23.8)。在整个研究期间,这些发病率没有统计学上的显著变化。我们的结果表明,即使采用优化干预措施,犬只扑杀项目也不会降低CLI的发病率。这种失败的可能原因包括:目前可用的血清学方法缺乏足够的灵敏度和/或特异性,无法准确识别所有需要扑杀以预防利什曼原虫传播的感染犬只;被扑杀的犬只立即被易感幼犬取代,而且经常被已经感染的犬只取代;以及其他宿主可能参与维持犬类感染。对ZVL控制的进一步努力应致力于制定新策略或通过设计合理试验来测试现有的控制方法。