O'Brien Katherine, Grifferty Grace, Totten Adriana, Asres Mezgebu Silamsaw, Ayele Eleni, Coombs Philip, Orriols Adrienne M, Mosurkal Shreyas, Krulwich Ellie, Oruko Leah, Roman Isabel C, Shah Prapti, Fanning-Hughes Riley, Williams Abigail L, Wallace Fiona, Wong Morgan G, Roe Sophia, Gandhi Khushi, Matari Laith, Shaikh Sara, Binkley Abigail, Boutselis Benjamin J D, Chaudhry Amer, Haile Mahlet, Shirley Hugh, Wamai Richard, Diro Ermias
Department of Public Health and Health Sciences, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
African Centre for Community Investment in Health, Nginyang, Baringo County, Kenya.
BMJ Open. 2025 Jun 19;15(6):e100284. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-100284.
With recent efforts to eliminate visceral leishmaniasis in East Africa, we aimed to map the breadth of research on leishmaniases in Ethiopia, one of the high-endemic countries in the region, to help understand the current literature landscape and highlight priority areas for future research.
The scoping review was conducted in accordance with the JBI Scoping Review Methodology Group's guidance and reported following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses-Extension for Scoping Reviews guidelines.
We searched the following databases and sources: PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, Global Medicus Index, PROSPERO, ClinicalTrials.gov and the Pan African Clinical Trials Registry and known local journals.
We included studies addressing the issue of leishmaniasis in Ethiopia that were published in English language.
Two reviewers independently extracted data from each study, with conflicts resolved by a third reviewer. The identified studies were analysed using an extensive codebook, which was previously developed by this team and adapted to the Ethiopian context to classify the research into different categories.
A total of 8698 articles were identified. A stepwise review was conducted, and 639 papers were selected for inclusion. The research spans different themes and designs and has steadily increased over the past 14 years. Research on prevention and control, health systems/policies and post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis, as well as randomised controlled trials, was lacking. Studies on coinfections with other diseases accounted for 14% of research.
The findings underscore the growing amount of research on leishmaniasis in Ethiopia, addressing several themes and emphasising the need for more research in prevention, control, health systems/policy and high-quality studies for evidence-based treatment.
随着近期在东非消除内脏利什曼病的努力,我们旨在梳理埃塞俄比亚(该地区高流行国家之一)利什曼病的研究广度,以帮助了解当前的文献状况,并突出未来研究的重点领域。
本范围综述按照JBI范围综述方法学小组的指导进行,并根据系统评价与Meta分析扩展版的首选报告项目范围综述指南进行报告。
我们检索了以下数据库和来源:PubMed、Embase、科学网、Cochrane图书馆、全球医学索引、PROSPERO、ClinicalTrials.gov和泛非临床试验注册中心以及当地知名期刊。
我们纳入了以英文发表的、探讨埃塞俄比亚利什曼病问题的研究。
两名评审员独立从每项研究中提取数据,如有冲突则由第三名评审员解决。使用一个广泛的编码手册对纳入的研究进行分析,该手册由本团队先前编制,并根据埃塞俄比亚的情况进行了调整,以便将研究分类为不同类别。
共识别出8698篇文章。进行了逐步筛选,最终纳入639篇论文。研究涵盖不同主题和设计,且在过去14年中稳步增加。缺乏关于预防与控制、卫生系统/政策以及黑热病后皮肤利什曼病的研究,以及随机对照试验。关于与其他疾病合并感染的研究占研究总数的14%。
研究结果强调了埃塞俄比亚利什曼病研究数量的不断增加,涉及多个主题,并强调需要在预防、控制、卫生系统/政策以及高质量的循证治疗研究方面开展更多研究。