Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London, United Kingdom.
London Centre for Neglected Tropical Disease Research, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, Norfolk Place, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2021 Feb 5;15(2):e0009120. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0009120. eCollection 2021 Feb.
Paragonimiasis is caused by zoonotic trematodes of Paragonimus spp., found in Asia, the Americas and Africa, particularly in tropical regions. These parasites have a complex, multi-host life cycle, with mammalian definitive hosts and larval stages cycling through two intermediate hosts (snails and freshwater decapod crustaceans). In Africa, paragonimiasis is particularly neglected, and remains the only human parasitic disease without a fully characterised life cycle. However paragonimiasis has potentially significant impacts on public health in Africa, and prevalence has likely been underestimated through under-reporting and misdiagnosis as tuberculosis due to a similar clinical presentation. We identified the need to synthesise current knowledge and map endemic foci for African Paragonimus spp. together with Poikilorchis congolensis, a rare, taxonomically distant trematode with a similar distribution and morphology. We present the first systematic review of the literature relating to African paragonimiasis, combined with mapping of all reported occurrences of Paragonimus spp. throughout Africa, from the 1910s to the present. In human surveys, numerous reports of significant recent transmission in Southeast Nigeria were uncovered, with high prevalence and intensity of infection. Overall prevalence was significantly higher for P. uterobilateralis compared to P. africanus across studies. The potential endemicity of P. africanus in Côte d'Ivoire is also reported. In freshwater crab intermediate hosts, differences in prevalence and intensity of either P. uterobilateralis or P. africanus were evident across genera and species, suggesting differences in susceptibility. Mapping showed temporal stability of endemic foci, with the majority of known occurrences of Paragonimus found in the rainforest zone of West and Central Africa, but with several outliers elsewhere on the continent. This suggests substantial under sampling and localised infection where potential host distributions overlap. Our review highlights the urgent need for increased sampling in active disease foci in Africa, particularly using molecular analysis to fully characterise Paragonimus species and their hosts.
并殖吸虫病是由亚洲、美洲和非洲的并殖科吸虫引起的,尤其在热带地区流行。这些寄生虫具有复杂的多宿主生活史,哺乳动物终末宿主和幼虫阶段在两个中间宿主(蜗牛和淡水十足甲壳动物)中循环。在非洲, 并殖吸虫病尤其被忽视,仍然是唯一一种没有完全描述其生活史的人类寄生虫病。然而, 并殖吸虫病对非洲的公共卫生可能有重大影响,由于临床表现相似,漏报和误诊为肺结核,其流行率可能被低估。我们发现有必要综合当前的知识,并绘制非洲并殖科吸虫和 Poikilorchis congolensis 的流行地区图,后者是一种罕见的、分类上相距较远的吸虫,分布和形态相似。我们首次对非洲并殖吸虫病的文献进行了系统回顾,并结合了从 20 世纪 10 年代至今在整个非洲报告的所有 Paragonimus spp. 发生情况的绘图。在人类调查中,在尼日利亚东南部发现了许多最近传播的重大报告,感染率和感染强度很高。总体而言,在研究中,P. uterobilateralis 的流行率显著高于 P. africanus。还报告了科特迪瓦 P. africanus 的潜在流行情况。在淡水蟹中间宿主中,无论是 P. uterobilateralis 还是 P. africanus,在属和种之间,其流行率和感染强度都存在差异,这表明宿主的易感性存在差异。绘图显示了流行地区的时间稳定性,大多数已知的 Paragonimus 发生在西非和中非的雨林区,但在非洲大陆的其他地方也有几个异常点。这表明在潜在宿主分布重叠的地方,采样不足且存在局部感染。我们的综述强调了在非洲活跃疾病流行地区增加采样的迫切需要,特别是使用分子分析来充分描述并殖科吸虫及其宿主。