Lymphatic Filariasis Support Centre, Department of Parasitology, Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2012;6(4):e1547. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0001547. Epub 2012 Apr 24.
Human helminthiases are of considerable public health importance in sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, and Latin America. The acknowledgement of the disease burden due to helminth infections, the availability of donated or affordable drugs that are mostly safe and moderately efficacious, and the implementation of viable mass drug administration (MDA) interventions have prompted the establishment of various large-scale control and elimination programmes. These programmes have benefited from improved epidemiological mapping of the infections, better understanding of the scope and limitations of currently available diagnostics and of the relationship between infection and morbidity, feasibility of community-directed or school-based interventions, and advances in the design of monitoring and evaluation (M&E) protocols. Considerable success has been achieved in reducing morbidity or suppressing transmission in a number of settings, whilst challenges remain in many others. Some of the obstacles include the lack of diagnostic tools appropriate to the changing requirements of ongoing interventions and elimination settings; the reliance on a handful of drugs about which not enough is known regarding modes of action, modes of resistance, and optimal dosage singly or in combination; the difficulties in sustaining adequate coverage and compliance in prolonged and/or integrated programmes; an incomplete understanding of the social, behavioural, and environmental determinants of infection; and last, but not least, very little investment in research and development (R&D). The Disease Reference Group on Helminth Infections (DRG4), established in 2009 by the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR), was given the mandate to undertake a comprehensive review of recent advances in helminthiases research, identify research gaps, and rank priorities for an R&D agenda for the control and elimination of these infections. This review presents the processes undertaken to identify and rank ten top research priorities; discusses the implications of realising these priorities in terms of their potential for improving global health and achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs); outlines salient research funding needs; and introduces the series of reviews that follow in this PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases collection, "A Research Agenda for Helminth Diseases of Humans."
人体寄生虫病在撒哈拉以南非洲、亚洲和拉丁美洲具有相当重要的公共卫生意义。由于寄生虫感染而导致的疾病负担、捐赠或负担得起的药物的可用性,这些药物大多安全且具有适度疗效,以及可行的大规模药物管理(MDA)干预措施的实施,促使建立了各种大规模的控制和消除计划。这些计划得益于对感染的流行病学进行了更好的绘制、更好地理解了当前可用的诊断方法的范围和局限性以及感染与发病之间的关系、社区或学校为基础的干预措施的可行性以及监测和评估(M&E)协议设计的进步。在许多环境中,已经在降低发病率或抑制传播方面取得了相当大的成功,而在许多其他环境中仍然存在挑战。其中一些障碍包括缺乏适合正在进行的干预和消除环境不断变化的需求的诊断工具;对作用方式、耐药模式以及单独或联合使用的最佳剂量知之甚少的少数几种药物的依赖;在长期和/或综合计划中维持足够的覆盖率和合规性的困难;对感染的社会、行为和环境决定因素的理解不完整;最后但并非最不重要的一点是,对研究和开发(R&D)的投资非常少。寄生虫感染疾病参考小组(DRG4)于 2009 年由热带病研究与培训特别计划(TDR)成立,其任务是对寄生虫病研究的最新进展进行全面审查,确定研究差距,并为控制和消除这些感染的 R&D 议程确定优先事项。本审查介绍了确定和排名十大优先研究事项的过程;讨论了实现这些优先事项对改善全球健康和实现千年发展目标(MDGs)的潜在影响;概述了突出的研究资金需求;并介绍了本 PLoS 被忽视热带病系列中随后的一系列评论,“人类寄生虫病研究议程”。