Thomas Jackson, Peterson Greg M, Walton Shelley F, Carson Christine F, Naunton Mark, Baby Kavya E
Faculty of Health, University of Canberra, Bruce, 2601, ACT, Australia.
Faculty of Health, University of Tasmania, Hobart, 7005, TAS, Australia.
BMC Infect Dis. 2015 Jul 1;15:250. doi: 10.1186/s12879-015-0983-z.
Scabies is an ancient disease (documented as far back as 2500 years ago). It affects about 300 million people annually worldwide, and the prevalence is as high as about 60% in Indigenous and Torres Strait Islander children in Australia. This is more than six times the rate seen in the rest of the developed world. Scabies is frequently complicated by bacterial infection leading to the development of skin sores and other more serious consequences such as septicaemia and chronic heart and kidney diseases. This causes a substantial social and economic burden especially in resource poor communities around the world.
Very few treatment options are currently available for the management of scabies infection. In this manuscript we briefly discuss the clinical consequences of scabies and the problems found (studies conducted in Australia) with the currently used topical and oral treatments. Current scabies treatment options are fairly ineffective in preventing treatment relapse, inflammatory skin reactions and associated bacterial skin infections. None have ovicidal, antibacterial, anti-inflammatory and/or anti-pruritic properties. Treatments which are currently available for scabies can be problematic with adverse effects and perhaps of greater concern the risk of treatment failure. The development of new chemical entities is doubtful in the near future. Though there may be potential for immunological control, the development of a vaccine or other immunotherapy modalities may be decades away. The emergence of resistance among scabies mites to classical scabicides and ineffectiveness of current treatments (in reducing inflammatory skin reactions and secondary bacterial infections associated with scabies), raise serious concerns regarding current therapy. Treatment adherence difficulties, and safety and efficacy uncertainties in the young and elderly, all signal the need to identify new treatments for scabies.
疥疮是一种古老的疾病(早在2500年前就有记载)。全球每年约有3亿人受其影响,在澳大利亚的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民儿童中,患病率高达约60%。这是发达国家其他地区患病率的六倍多。疥疮常并发细菌感染,导致皮肤溃疡以及败血症、慢性心脏和肾脏疾病等其他更严重的后果。这造成了巨大的社会和经济负担,尤其是在世界上资源匮乏的社区。
目前治疗疥疮感染的选择非常有限。在本手稿中,我们简要讨论了疥疮的临床后果以及(在澳大利亚进行的研究中)当前使用的局部和口服治疗方法所存在的问题。目前的疥疮治疗方法在预防治疗复发、炎症性皮肤反应和相关细菌皮肤感染方面相当无效。没有一种具有杀卵、抗菌、抗炎和/或止痒特性。目前可用的疥疮治疗方法可能存在不良反应问题,也许更令人担忧的是治疗失败的风险。在不久的将来,新化学实体的开发前景不明朗。尽管免疫控制可能有潜力,但疫苗或其他免疫治疗方式的开发可能还需要几十年时间。疥疮螨虫对经典杀螨剂产生耐药性以及当前治疗方法(在减轻与疥疮相关的炎症性皮肤反应和继发性细菌感染方面)无效,引发了对当前治疗方法的严重担忧。治疗依从性困难,以及在年轻人和老年人中的安全性和有效性不确定性,都表明需要寻找新的疥疮治疗方法。