Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland.
University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2019 Jan 10;13(1):e0007086. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0007086. eCollection 2019 Jan.
Plasmodium spp. and helminths are co-endemic in many parts of the tropics; hence, co-infection is a common phenomenon. Interactions between Plasmodium and helminth infections may alter the host's immune response and susceptibility and thus impact on morbidity. There is little information on the direction and magnitude of such interactions and results are conflicting. This study aimed at shedding new light on the potential interactions of Plasmodium and helminth co-infections on anemia and splenomegaly in different population groups in Côte d'Ivoire.
Parasitologic and clinical data were obtained from four cross-sectional community-based studies and a national school-based survey conducted between 2011 and 2013 in Côte d'Ivoire. Six scenarios of co-infection pairs defined as Plasmodium infection or high parasitemia, combined with one of three common helminth infections (i.e., Schistosoma mansoni, S. haematobium, and hookworm) served for analysis. Adjusted logistic regression models were built for each scenario and interaction measures on additive scale calculated according to Rothman et al., while an interaction term in the model served as multiplicative scale measure.
All identified significant interactions were of antagonistic nature but varied in magnitude and species combination. In study participants aged 5-18 years from community-based studies, Plasmodium-hookworm co-infection showed an antagonistic interaction on additive scale on splenomegaly, while Plasmodium-Schistosoma co-infection scenarios showed protective effects on multiplicative scale for anemia and splenomegaly in participants aged 5-16 years from a school-based study.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: No exacerbation from co-infection with Plasmodium and helminths was observed, neither in participants aged 5-18 years nor in adults from the community-based studies. Future studies should unravel underlying mechanisms of the observed interactions, as this knowledge might help shaping control efforts against these diseases of poverty.
疟原虫和蠕虫在热带地区的许多地方共同流行;因此,合并感染是一种常见现象。疟原虫和蠕虫感染之间的相互作用可能改变宿主的免疫反应和易感性,从而影响发病率。关于这种相互作用的方向和程度的信息很少,结果也存在矛盾。本研究旨在为科特迪瓦不同人群中疟原虫和蠕虫合并感染对贫血和脾肿大的潜在相互作用提供新的认识。
寄生虫学和临床数据来自于 2011 年至 2013 年期间在科特迪瓦进行的四项基于社区的横断面研究和一项全国性的基于学校的调查。分析了六种合并感染对的情况,定义为疟原虫感染或高寄生虫血症,结合三种常见的蠕虫感染(即曼氏血吸虫、埃及血吸虫和钩虫)之一。对于每种情况,都建立了调整后的逻辑回归模型,并根据 Rothman 等人的方法计算了加性尺度上的相互作用度量,而模型中的相互作用项则作为乘法尺度的度量。
所有确定的显著相互作用均为拮抗性质,但在程度和物种组合上有所不同。在社区研究中年龄为 5-18 岁的研究参与者中,疟原虫-钩虫合并感染在脾肿大的加性尺度上表现出拮抗相互作用,而在基于学校的研究中年龄为 5-16 岁的参与者中,疟原虫-血吸虫合并感染情景对贫血和脾肿大表现出乘法尺度的保护作用。
结论/意义:在社区研究中的 5-18 岁参与者和成年人中,未观察到疟原虫和蠕虫合并感染的加重作用。未来的研究应揭示观察到的相互作用的潜在机制,因为这一知识可能有助于塑造针对这些贫困疾病的控制工作。