Leeds Institute of Medical Research, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom.
Center of Tropical Medicine and Travel Medicine, Department of Infectious Diseases, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2021 Oct 13;15(10):e0009862. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0009862. eCollection 2021 Oct.
Chronic wounds pose a significant healthcare burden in low- and middle-income countries. Buruli ulcer (BU), caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans infection, causes wounds with high morbidity and financial burden. Although highly endemic in West and Central Africa, the presence of BU in Sierra Leone is not well described. This study aimed to confirm or exclude BU in suspected cases of chronic wounds presenting to Masanga Hospital, Sierra Leone.
Demographics, baseline clinical data, and quality of life scores were collected from patients with wounds suspected to be BU. Wound tissue samples were acquired and transported to the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Switzerland, for analysis to detect Mycobacterium ulcerans using qPCR, microscopic smear examination, and histopathology, as per World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations.
Twenty-one participants with wounds suspected to be BU were enrolled over 4-weeks (Feb-March 2019). Participants were predominantly young working males (62% male, 38% female, mean 35yrs, 90% employed in an occupation or as a student) with large, single, ulcerating wounds (mean diameter 9.4cm, 86% single wound) exclusively of the lower limbs (60% foot, 40% lower leg) present for a mean 15 months. The majority reported frequent exposure to water outdoors (76%). Self-reports of over-the-counter antibiotic use prior to presentation was high (81%), as was history of trauma (38%) and surgical interventions prior to enrolment (48%). Regarding laboratory investigation, all samples were negative for BU by microscopy, histopathology, and qPCR. Histopathology analysis revealed heavy bacterial load in many of the samples. The study had excellent participant recruitment, however follow-up proved difficult.
BU was not confirmed as a cause of chronic ulceration in our cohort of suspected cases, as judged by laboratory analysis according to WHO standards. This does not exclude the presence of BU in the region, and the definitive cause of these treatment-resistance chronic wounds is uncertain.
慢性伤口给中低收入国家带来了巨大的医疗负担。由溃疡分枝杆菌感染引起的伯氏溃疡(BU)会导致高发病率和经济负担的伤口。尽管伯氏溃疡在西非和中非高度流行,但塞拉利昂的伯氏溃疡存在情况并未得到很好的描述。本研究旨在确认或排除 Masanga 医院疑似慢性伤口的伯氏溃疡病例。
从疑似伯氏溃疡的患者中收集人口统计学、基线临床数据和生活质量评分。采集伤口组织样本并运送到瑞士热带与公共卫生研究所,按照世界卫生组织(WHO)的建议,使用 qPCR、显微镜涂片检查和组织病理学检测来检测溃疡分枝杆菌。
在 4 周内(2019 年 2 月至 3 月)共纳入了 21 名疑似伯氏溃疡的患者。参与者主要为年轻的男性劳动者(62%为男性,38%为女性,平均年龄为 35 岁,90%从事职业或学生),下肢有大的、单一的溃疡性伤口(平均直径 9.4cm,86%为单一伤口),主要是足部(60%)和小腿(40%)。大多数人报告频繁接触户外的水(76%)。在就诊前,自我报告使用过非处方抗生素的比例很高(81%),创伤史(38%)和就诊前的手术干预(48%)也很常见。关于实验室检查,所有样本在显微镜、组织病理学和 qPCR 检查中均为伯氏溃疡阴性。组织病理学分析显示许多样本中存在大量细菌负荷。该研究的患者招募非常出色,但随访较为困难。
根据 WHO 标准的实验室分析判断,在我们的疑似病例队列中,未确认伯氏溃疡是慢性溃疡的病因。这并不能排除该地区存在伯氏溃疡的可能性,这些治疗抵抗性慢性伤口的明确病因尚不确定。