Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland; University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
Lancet Infect Dis. 2013 Jun;13(6):507-18. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(13)70071-9. Epub 2013 Apr 4.
The four common soil-transmitted helminth species-Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichuris trichiura, and the two hookworm species Ancylostoma duodenale and Necator americanus-are endemic in South America, but their distribution, infection prevalence, and regional burden are poorly understood. We aimed to estimate the risk and number of people infected with A lumbricoides, T trichiura, and hookworm across South America.
We did a systematic review of reports on the prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth infection in South America published up to May 14, 2012. We extracted and georeferenced relevant survey data and did a meta-analysis of the data to assess the geographical distribution of the infection risk with Bayesian geostatistical models. We used advanced Bayesian variable selection to identify environmental determinants that govern the distribution of soil-transmitted helminth infections.
We screened 4085 scientific papers and identified 174 articles containing relevant survey prevalence data. We georeferenced 6948 survey locations and entered the data into the open-access Global Neglected Tropical Diseases database. Survey data were sparse for the south of the continent and for the western coast, and we identified no relevant information for Uruguay and little data for smaller countries such as Suriname, Guyana, French Guiana, and Ecuador. Population-adjusted prevalence of infection with A lumbricoides was 15·6%, with T trichiura was 12·5%, and with hookworm was 11·9% from 2005 onwards. Risks of contracting soil-transmitted helminth infection have substantially reduced since 2005 (odds ratio 0·47 [95% Bayesian credible interval 0·46-0·47] for A lumbricoides, 0·54 [0·54-0·55] for T trichiura, and 0·58 [0·58-0·59] for hookworm infection).
Our findings offer important baseline support for spatial targeting of soil-transmitted helminthiasis control, and suggest that more information about the prevalence of soil-transmitted helminth infection is needed, especially in countries in which we estimate prevalence of infection to be high but for which current data are scarce.
UBS Optimus Foundation and Brazilian Swiss Joint Research Programme (BSJRP 011008).
在南美洲,四种常见的土壤传播性蠕虫——蛔虫、鞭虫和两种钩虫(十二指肠钩口线虫和美洲板口线虫)——呈地方性流行,但它们的分布、感染率和区域负担情况了解甚少。我们旨在估计整个南美洲感染蛔虫、鞭虫和钩虫的风险和人数。
我们对截至 2012 年 5 月 14 日发表的有关南美洲土壤传播性蠕虫感染流行率的报告进行了系统综述。我们提取和地理参考了相关调查数据,并采用贝叶斯地质统计模型对数据进行了荟萃分析,以评估感染风险的地理分布。我们采用高级贝叶斯变量选择方法来确定控制土壤传播性蠕虫感染分布的环境决定因素。
我们筛选了 4085 篇科学论文,确定了 174 篇含有相关调查流行率数据的文章。我们对 6948 个调查地点进行了地理参考,并将数据输入到公开获取的全球被忽视热带病数据库中。该大陆南部和西海岸的调查数据非常稀少,我们没有发现乌拉圭的相关信息,以及苏里南、圭亚那、法属圭亚那和厄瓜多尔等较小国家的少量数据。自 2005 年以来,蛔虫感染的人群调整流行率为 15.6%,鞭虫为 12.5%,钩虫为 11.9%。自 2005 年以来,感染土壤传播性蠕虫的风险显著降低(蛔虫的比值比为 0.47[95%贝叶斯可信区间为 0.46-0.47],鞭虫为 0.54[0.54-0.55],钩虫为 0.58[0.58-0.59])。
我们的研究结果为土壤传播性蠕虫病的空间靶向控制提供了重要的基线支持,并表明需要更多关于土壤传播性蠕虫感染流行率的信息,特别是在我们估计感染率较高但目前数据稀少的国家。
瑞银优进基金会和巴西瑞士联合研究计划(BSJRP 011008)。