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Parasitological and malacological surveys reveal urogenital schistosomiasis on Mafia Island, Tanzania to be an imported infection

Parasitological and malacological surveys reveal urogenital schistosomiasis on Mafia Island, Tanzania to be an imported infection
Parasitological and malacological surveys reveal urogenital schistosomiasis on Mafia Island, Tanzania to be an imported infection
To confirm the local endemicity of Schistosoma haematobium on Mafia Island, Tanzania, conjoint parasitological and malacological surveys were undertaken in July 2006 with parasitological investigations supplemented with case-history questionnaires. A total of 238 children (125 girls and 113 boys, mean age of 13.9 years) across 9 primary schools were examined. The prevalence of micro-haematuria and egg-patent infection was 18.1% (CI95=9.6-33.6) and 4.2% (CI95=1.9-7.6), respectively but a strong female bias was observed for micro-haematuria (5.6F:1M) contrasting with a strong male bias for the presence of eggs (1F:4M). All egg-patent infections were of light-intensity (<10eggs/10ml). No clear associations between infection prevalence and local water-contact, by school, were found and all 10 of the egg-positive children had a travel history to the nearby mainland or Zanzibar. Inspection of community diagnostic registers at Kilindoni Hospital revealed a low proportion (<2%) of egg-patent infection for 20,306 samples tested in the 2000-2005 period. A total of 43 freshwater sites, a third of which were previously sampled in 1999 and 2002, were surveyed and 11 species of freshwater mollusc were found. Four species of Bulinus (B. nasutus, B. forskalii, B. barthi and B. sp.) were encountered across 13 sites with B. nasutus restricted to 3 of these towards the north of the island. No collected snail was observed to shed schistosome cercariae. Further characterisation of B. nasutus and S. haematobium included infection challenge on two occasions, with miracidia obtained from egg-patent children from Mafia and Unguja islands as well as DNA barcoding of snails and schistosomes. B. nasutus was shown refractory to infection. With the substantial travel to and from Mafia, the refractory nature of local snails and evidence from DNA barcoding in schistosomes and snails, we conclude that urogenital schistosomiasis is an imported infection.
Adolescent, Animals, Bulinus/classification, Child, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic, Data Collection, Endemic Diseases, Female, Humans, Male, Molecular Epidemiology, Prevalence, Schistosoma haematobium/classification, Schistosomiasis haematobia/epidemiology, Schools, Tanzania/epidemiology, Young Adult
0001-706X
326-333
Stothard, J Russell
38c65736-a96b-46e0-bbd9-e65744b130ad
Ameri, Haji
1dd10926-fc79-4ca7-b7f3-aada667e9d26
Khamis, I Simba
9c0e3071-15f9-47ac-80b5-d2aa9c34c5eb
Blair, Lynsey
c0e212ff-1ad0-4442-9240-efdccbbe4a58
Nyandindi, Ursuline S
7292fe4f-1274-484f-92d4-6ae0f97a2c81
Kane, Richard A
28611046-0fdd-4bee-a16c-6e46d5da776e
Johnston, David A
b41163c9-b9d2-425c-af99-2a357204014e
Webster, Bonnie L
d3ada909-c362-4eea-aaea-e41c7b33f701
Rollinson, David
917d0e09-176f-4058-89ff-ec2ad3a496ad
Stothard, J Russell
38c65736-a96b-46e0-bbd9-e65744b130ad
Ameri, Haji
1dd10926-fc79-4ca7-b7f3-aada667e9d26
Khamis, I Simba
9c0e3071-15f9-47ac-80b5-d2aa9c34c5eb
Blair, Lynsey
c0e212ff-1ad0-4442-9240-efdccbbe4a58
Nyandindi, Ursuline S
7292fe4f-1274-484f-92d4-6ae0f97a2c81
Kane, Richard A
28611046-0fdd-4bee-a16c-6e46d5da776e
Johnston, David A
b41163c9-b9d2-425c-af99-2a357204014e
Webster, Bonnie L
d3ada909-c362-4eea-aaea-e41c7b33f701
Rollinson, David
917d0e09-176f-4058-89ff-ec2ad3a496ad

Stothard, J Russell, Ameri, Haji, Khamis, I Simba, Blair, Lynsey, Nyandindi, Ursuline S, Kane, Richard A, Johnston, David A, Webster, Bonnie L and Rollinson, David (2013) Parasitological and malacological surveys reveal urogenital schistosomiasis on Mafia Island, Tanzania to be an imported infection. Acta Tropica, 128 (2), 326-333. (doi:10.1016/j.actatropica.2012.09.006).

Record type: Article

Abstract

To confirm the local endemicity of Schistosoma haematobium on Mafia Island, Tanzania, conjoint parasitological and malacological surveys were undertaken in July 2006 with parasitological investigations supplemented with case-history questionnaires. A total of 238 children (125 girls and 113 boys, mean age of 13.9 years) across 9 primary schools were examined. The prevalence of micro-haematuria and egg-patent infection was 18.1% (CI95=9.6-33.6) and 4.2% (CI95=1.9-7.6), respectively but a strong female bias was observed for micro-haematuria (5.6F:1M) contrasting with a strong male bias for the presence of eggs (1F:4M). All egg-patent infections were of light-intensity (<10eggs/10ml). No clear associations between infection prevalence and local water-contact, by school, were found and all 10 of the egg-positive children had a travel history to the nearby mainland or Zanzibar. Inspection of community diagnostic registers at Kilindoni Hospital revealed a low proportion (<2%) of egg-patent infection for 20,306 samples tested in the 2000-2005 period. A total of 43 freshwater sites, a third of which were previously sampled in 1999 and 2002, were surveyed and 11 species of freshwater mollusc were found. Four species of Bulinus (B. nasutus, B. forskalii, B. barthi and B. sp.) were encountered across 13 sites with B. nasutus restricted to 3 of these towards the north of the island. No collected snail was observed to shed schistosome cercariae. Further characterisation of B. nasutus and S. haematobium included infection challenge on two occasions, with miracidia obtained from egg-patent children from Mafia and Unguja islands as well as DNA barcoding of snails and schistosomes. B. nasutus was shown refractory to infection. With the substantial travel to and from Mafia, the refractory nature of local snails and evidence from DNA barcoding in schistosomes and snails, we conclude that urogenital schistosomiasis is an imported infection.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 12 September 2012
Published date: 1 November 2013
Additional Information: Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Adolescent, Animals, Bulinus/classification, Child, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic, Data Collection, Endemic Diseases, Female, Humans, Male, Molecular Epidemiology, Prevalence, Schistosoma haematobium/classification, Schistosomiasis haematobia/epidemiology, Schools, Tanzania/epidemiology, Young Adult

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Local EPrints ID: 468892
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/468892
ISSN: 0001-706X
PURE UUID: ddede875-b03f-4005-8f9d-90fdfff380c9
ORCID for David A Johnston: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6703-6014

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Date deposited: 31 Aug 2022 16:53
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:11

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Contributors

Author: J Russell Stothard
Author: Haji Ameri
Author: I Simba Khamis
Author: Lynsey Blair
Author: Ursuline S Nyandindi
Author: Richard A Kane
Author: David A Johnston ORCID iD
Author: Bonnie L Webster
Author: David Rollinson

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