Resistance to reinfection with Schistosoma mansoni in occupationally exposed adults and effect of HIV-1 co-infection on susceptibility to schistosomiasis: a longitudinal study.
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Date
2002Author
Karanja, DM
Hightower, AW
Colley, DG
Mwinzi, PN
Galil, K
Andove, J
Secor, WE
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
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Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Previous studies have reported age-dependent development of resistance to reinfection by schistosomes and identified immunological correlates of this resistance. However, whether resistance exists that is independent of age effects has been questioned. We did a longitudinal investigation of reinfection by Schistosoma mansoni in an adult population with high occupational exposure.
METHODS:
We monitored a cohort of 96 male car washers working along the shores of Lake Victoria, Kenya during 349.7 person-years for frequency of water contact and infection with S mansoni. Patients were treated with praziquantel upon study entry and after reinfection with S mansoni. Bivariate analyses and a multivariate proportional hazards model were used to assess the effects of water contact, previous infections, and HIV-1 on S mansoni reinfection rates.
FINDINGS:
13 car washers did not get reinfected or only became reinfected after an extended time (91 weeks). 47 initially had a short time to reinfection (15 weeks) but on subsequent treatments showed increased time to reinfection (29-38 weeks). 36 consistently displayed short times to reinfection (<15 weeks) despite multiple reinfection and treatment cycles. Decreased CD4 T-cell counts in HIV-1-positive individuals corresponded to increased susceptibility to S mansoni reinfection.
INTERPRETATION:
Adults similarly exposed to schistosomiasis are either resistant to reinfection; susceptible, but develop resistance to reinfection after multiple treatments; or remain susceptible to reinfection. Thus, immunological resistance to reinfection with S mansoni exists or can develop independent of age effects. The consequence of HIV-1 co-infection suggests that CD4 T cells contribute to this resistance.
URI
http://erepository.uonbi.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/57659http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12241930
Publisher
University of Nairobi College of Health Science
Description
Article
Collections
- Faculty of Health Sciences (FHS) [10387]