Calvopina Manuel, Contreras Jesse, Cevallos William, Lee Gwenyth, Levy Karen, Eisenberg Joseph N S
One Health Research Group, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de las Américas (UDLA), Quito, Ecuador.
Department of Epidemiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2024 Nov 26;112(2):307-313. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.24-0164. Print 2025 Feb 5.
Deworming for pregnant women using a single dose of albendazole or mebendazole is recommended by the WHO in areas where the baseline prevalence of hookworm and/or trichuriasis is >20%. However, other helminths and protozoa infecting pregnant women are not affected by these drugs and dosages. To assess the prevalence and diversity of intestinal helminth and protozoan infections, we analyzed stool samples from pregnant women recently enrolled into a birth cohort, along a rural-urban gradient in northern coastal Ecuador from 2019 to 2022. Participants provided a stool sample in their third trimester (n = 444). Samples were concentrated by the Ritchie method and observed microscopically for the detection of cysts, eggs, and larvae. The overall prevalence of infection with one or more parasites was 69% (95% CI: 67-74%), ranging from 52% in urban participants to 76% in rural participants (percentile rank = 1.39, 95% CI: 1.07-1.87). This differential between urban and rural communities persisted when data were disaggregated into helminth and protozoan infections (prevalence = 19% and 46%, respectively, in urban participants compared with 42% and 58% among rural participants). The most prevalent helminth was Ascaris lumbricoides (27%), followed by Trichuris trichiura (13%) and hookworm (7.4%). Hymenolepis nana, Strongyloides stercoralis, and Enterobius vermicularis were also observed. Six protozoan pathogens were detected, including Entamoeba histolytica/dispar (23%), Giardia intestinalis (5%), and Balantidium coli, along with nine protozoa that are nonpathogenic or of debated pathogenicity. The high infection burden and diversity of intestinal parasites found in this study highlight a need to revise strategies for preventing and treating intestinal parasitic infections in pregnant women.
世界卫生组织建议,在钩虫和(或)鞭虫基线感染率>20%的地区,对孕妇采用单剂量阿苯达唑或甲苯达唑进行驱虫。然而,感染孕妇的其他蠕虫和原生动物不受这些药物和剂量的影响。为了评估肠道蠕虫和原生动物感染的流行率和多样性,我们分析了2019年至2022年期间厄瓜多尔北部沿海地区从农村到城市梯度上近期纳入出生队列的孕妇的粪便样本。参与者在孕晚期提供了粪便样本(n = 444)。样本采用Ritchie方法浓缩,并通过显微镜观察以检测囊肿、虫卵和幼虫。一种或多种寄生虫感染的总体流行率为69%(95%置信区间:67 - 74%),城市参与者为52%,农村参与者为76%(百分位数秩 = 1.39,95%置信区间:1.07 - 1.87)。当数据按蠕虫和原生动物感染分类时,城乡社区之间的这种差异仍然存在(城市参与者的流行率分别为19%和46%,而农村参与者分别为42%和58%)。最常见的蠕虫是蛔虫(27%),其次是鞭虫(13%)和钩虫(7.4%)。还观察到了微小膜壳绦虫、粪类圆线虫和蛲虫。检测到六种原生动物病原体,包括溶组织内阿米巴/迪斯帕内阿米巴(23%)、蓝氏贾第鞭毛虫(5%)和结肠小袋纤毛虫,以及九种非致病性或致病性存在争议的原生动物。本研究中发现的肠道寄生虫的高感染负担和多样性凸显了修订孕妇肠道寄生虫感染预防和治疗策略的必要性。