Division of Infectious Diseases and International Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Division of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2022 Nov 14;107(5):1041-1046. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.22-0413.
Pretransplant recommendations advise risk-based screening for strongyloidiasis, schistosomiasis, and Chagas disease. We evaluated the implementation of a chronic parasite screening protocol at a health system in a nonendemic region serving a large foreign-born population. Candidates listed for kidney transplant at Hennepin Healthcare (Minneapolis, MN) between 2010 and 2020 were included. Country of birth and serologic screening for strongyloidiasis, schistosomiasis, and Chagas disease were retrospectively obtained from electronic medical records. Parasite screening frequency and seropositivity was assessed before and after implementation of a geographic risk factor-based screening protocol in 2014. Cost-efficiency of presumptive treatment was modeled. Of 907 kidney transplant candidates, 312 (34%) were born in the United States and 232 (26%) outside the United States, with the remainder missing country of birth information. The 447 (49%) candidates evaluated after implementation of the screening protocol had fewer unidentified countries of birth (53%-27%, P < 0.001) and were more frequently screened for strongyloidiasis, schistosomiasis, and Chagas disease (14%-44%, 8%-22%, and 1-14%, respectively, all Ps < 0.001). The number of identified seropositive candidates increased after protocol implementation from two to 14 for strongyloidiasis and from one to 11 for schistosomiasis, with none seropositive for Chagas disease. The cost-efficiency model favored presumptive ivermectin when strongyloidiasis prevalence reaches 30% of those screened. Implementing a geographic risk screening protocol before kidney transplant increases attention to infectious disease risk associated with country of birth and identification of chronic parasitic infections. In populations with higher strongyloidiasis prevalence or lower ivermectin costs, presumptive treatment may be cost-efficient.
移植前建议根据风险进行钩虫病、血吸虫病和恰加斯病的筛查。我们评估了在一个为大量外国出生人口服务的非流行地区的医疗系统中实施慢性寄生虫筛查方案的情况。2010 年至 2020 年间在亨内平县医疗保健中心(明尼阿波利斯,明尼苏达州)列出的肾移植候选人都包括在内。从电子病历中回顾性获得了原籍国和钩虫病、血吸虫病和恰加斯病的血清学筛查情况。评估了 2014 年实施基于地理风险因素的筛查方案前后寄生虫筛查的频率和血清阳性率。对推定治疗的成本效益进行了建模。在 907 名肾移植候选人中,312 名(34%)出生于美国,232 名(26%)出生于美国以外,其余的出生国信息缺失。在实施筛查方案后评估的 447 名(49%)候选人中,未识别的出生国数量更少(53%-27%,P<0.001),并且更频繁地筛查钩虫病、血吸虫病和恰加斯病(14%-44%、8%-22%和 1-14%,所有 P<0.001)。方案实施后,血清阳性候选人的数量从强虫病的 2 例增加到 14 例,从血吸虫病的 1 例增加到 11 例,但恰加斯病没有血清阳性。成本效益模型倾向于在强虫病流行率达到筛查人群的 30%时使用伊维菌素进行推定治疗。在肾移植前实施基于地理风险的筛查方案可增加对与出生国相关的传染病风险的关注,并发现慢性寄生虫感染。在强虫病流行率较高或伊维菌素成本较低的人群中,推定治疗可能具有成本效益。