Department of Epidemiology, College of Public Health, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, 52242, USA.
Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases, University of Iowa Research Park, Coralville, Iowa, 52241, USA.
Parasit Vectors. 2019 Jan 23;12(1):54. doi: 10.1186/s13071-019-3312-3.
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a vector borne zoonotic disease endemic in humans and dogs in Brazil. Due to the increased risk of human infection secondary to the presence of infected dogs, public health measures in Brazil mandate testing and culling of infected dogs. Despite this important relationship between human and canine infection, little is known about what makes the dog reservoir progress to clinical illness, significantly tied to infectiousness to sand flies. Dogs in endemic areas of Brazil are exposed to many tick-borne pathogens, which are likely to alter the immune environment and thus control of L. infantum.
A cross-sectional study of 223 dogs from an area of Natal, in the Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil, were studied to determine the association between comorbid tick-borne disease and Leishmania infection in this endemic area. The risk of Leishmania seropositivity was 1.68× greater in dogs with tick-borne disease seropositivity compared to those without (Adjusted RR: 1.68, 95% CI: 1.09-2.61, P = 0.019). A longitudinal study of 214 hunting dogs in the USA was conducted to determine the causal relationship between infection with tick-borne diseases and progression of VL. Hunting dogs were evaluated three times across a full tick season to detect incident infection with tick-borne diseases. A logistic regression model with generalized estimating equations to estimate the parameters was used to determine how exposure to tick-borne disease altered VL progression over these three time points when controlling for other variables. Dogs infected with three or more tick-borne diseases were 11× more likely to be associated with progression to clinical VL than dogs with no tick-borne disease (Adjusted RR: 11.64, 95% CI: 1.22-110.99, P = 0.03). Dogs with exposure to both Leishmania spp. and tick-borne diseases were five times more likely to die during the study period (RR: 4.85, 95% CI: 1.65-14.24, P = 0.0051).
Comorbid tick-borne diseases dramatically increased the likelihood that a dog had clinical L. infantum infection, making them more likely to transmit infection to sand flies and people. As an important consequence, reduction of tick-borne disease exposure through topical or oral insecticides may be an important way to reduce progression and transmissibility of Leishmania infection from the canine reservoir to people.
内脏利什曼病(VL)是一种由媒介传播的人畜共患病,在巴西流行于人和狗之间。由于存在感染狗的人类感染风险增加,巴西的公共卫生措施要求对感染的狗进行检测和扑杀。尽管人类和犬类感染之间存在这种重要关系,但人们对导致犬类储存库进展为临床疾病的原因知之甚少,而这种疾病与沙蝇的传染性密切相关。巴西流行地区的狗暴露于许多蜱传病原体之下,这可能会改变免疫环境,从而控制婴儿利什曼原虫。
对来自巴西北里奥格兰德州纳塔尔地区的 223 只狗进行了横断面研究,以确定该流行地区蜱传疾病合并感染与利什曼原虫感染之间的相关性。与无蜱传疾病血清阳性的狗相比,具有蜱传疾病血清阳性的狗患利什曼原虫血清阳性的风险高 1.68 倍(调整后的 RR:1.68,95%CI:1.09-2.61,P=0.019)。对美国 214 只猎犬进行了纵向研究,以确定感染蜱传疾病与 VL 进展之间的因果关系。在整个蜱季,通过三次评估来检测猎犬新发的蜱传疾病感染。使用广义估计方程的逻辑回归模型来估计参数,以确定在控制其他变量的情况下,感染三种或更多种蜱传疾病如何改变这三个时间点上的 VL 进展。感染三种或更多种蜱传疾病的狗与无蜱传疾病的狗相比,与临床 VL 进展相关的可能性高 11 倍(调整后的 RR:11.64,95%CI:1.22-110.99,P=0.03)。接触利什曼原虫和蜱传疾病的狗在研究期间死亡的可能性高五倍(RR:4.85,95%CI:1.65-14.24,P=0.0051)。
合并蜱传疾病显著增加了狗发生临床婴儿利什曼原虫感染的可能性,使它们更有可能将感染传播给沙蝇和人类。作为一个重要的后果,通过局部或口服杀虫剂减少蜱传疾病的暴露可能是减少犬类储存库向人类传播利什曼原虫感染的进展和传染性的重要途径。