Rendell Victoria R, Gilman Robert H, Valencia Edward, Galdos-Cardenas Gerson, Verastegui Manuela, Sanchez Leny, Acosta Janet, Sanchez Gerardo, Ferrufino Lisbeth, LaFuente Carlos, Abastoflor Maria del Carmen, Colanzi Rony, Bern Caryn
Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States of America.
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Mar 25;10(3):e0119527. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0119527. eCollection 2015.
Congenital transmission is a major source of new Trypanosoma cruzi infections, and as vector and blood bank control continue to improve, the proportion due to congenital infection will grow. A major unanswered question is why reported transmission rates from T. cruzi-infected mothers vary so widely among study populations. Women with high parasite loads during pregnancy are more likely to transmit to their infants, but the factors that govern maternal parasite load are largely unknown. Better understanding of these factors could enable prioritization of screening programs to target women most at risk of transmission to their infants.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We screened pregnant women presenting for delivery in a large urban hospital in Bolivia and followed infants of infected women for congenital Chagas disease. Of 596 women screened, 128 (21.5%) had confirmed T. cruzi infection; transmission occurred from 15 (11.7%) infected women to their infants. Parasite loads were significantly higher among women who transmitted compared to those who did not. Congenital transmission occurred from 31.3% (9/29), 15.4% (4/26) and 0% (0/62) of women with high, moderate and low parasite load, respectively (χx2 for trend 18.2; p<0.0001). Twin births were associated with higher transmission risk and higher maternal parasite loads. Infected women without reported vector exposure had significantly higher parasite loads than those who had lived in an infested house (median 26.4 vs 0 parasites/mL; p<0.001) with an inverse relationship between years of living in an infested house and parasite load.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We hypothesize that sustained vector-borne parasite exposure and repeated superinfection by T. cruzi may act as an immune booster, allowing women to maintain effective control of the parasite despite the down-regulation of late pregnancy.
先天性传播是新的克氏锥虫感染的主要来源,随着对媒介和血库的控制不断改善,先天性感染所占比例将会增加。一个主要的未解决问题是,为什么在不同研究人群中,报告的克氏锥虫感染母亲的传播率差异如此之大。孕期寄生虫负荷高的女性更有可能将寄生虫传染给婴儿,但控制母体寄生虫负荷的因素在很大程度上尚不清楚。更好地了解这些因素可以确定筛查项目的优先级,以针对最有可能将寄生虫传染给婴儿的女性。
方法/主要发现:我们对在玻利维亚一家大型城市医院分娩的孕妇进行了筛查,并对感染女性的婴儿进行了先天性恰加斯病随访。在筛查的596名女性中,128名(21.5%)确诊感染克氏锥虫;15名(11.7%)感染女性将寄生虫传染给了她们的婴儿。与未发生传播的女性相比,发生传播的女性寄生虫负荷显著更高。寄生虫负荷高、中、低的女性的先天性传播率分别为31.3%(9/29)、15.4%(4/26)和0%(0/62)(趋势χ²为18.2;p<0.0001)。双胞胎分娩与更高的传播风险和更高的母体寄生虫负荷相关。未报告有媒介接触的感染女性的寄生虫负荷显著高于曾居住在有虫房屋中的女性(中位数分别为26.4和0个寄生虫/毫升;p<0.001),且在有虫房屋中居住的年数与寄生虫负荷呈负相关。
结论/意义:我们假设,持续的媒介传播寄生虫暴露和克氏锥虫的反复重叠感染可能起到免疫增强作用,使女性尽管在妊娠后期免疫功能下调,但仍能有效控制寄生虫。