| Literature DB >> 19707588 |
Abstract
The neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) are the most common conditions affecting the poorest 500 million people living in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), and together produce a burden of disease that may be equivalent to up to one-half of SSA's malaria disease burden and more than double that caused by tuberculosis. Approximately 85% of the NTD disease burden results from helminth infections. Hookworm infection occurs in almost half of SSA's poorest people, including 40-50 million school-aged children and 7 million pregnant women in whom it is a leading cause of anemia. Schistosomiasis is the second most prevalent NTD after hookworm (192 million cases), accounting for 93% of the world's number of cases and possibly associated with increased horizontal transmission of HIV/AIDS. Lymphatic filariasis (46-51 million cases) and onchocerciasis (37 million cases) are also widespread in SSA, each disease representing a significant cause of disability and reduction in the region's agricultural productivity. There is a dearth of information on Africa's non-helminth NTDs. The protozoan infections, human African trypanosomiasis and visceral leishmaniasis, affect almost 100,000 people, primarily in areas of conflict in SSA where they cause high mortality, and where trachoma is the most prevalent bacterial NTD (30 million cases). However, there are little or no data on some very important protozoan infections, e.g., amebiasis and toxoplasmosis; bacterial infections, e.g., typhoid fever and non-typhoidal salmonellosis, the tick-borne bacterial zoonoses, and non-tuberculosis mycobaterial infections; and arboviral infections. Thus, the overall burden of Africa's NTDs may be severely underestimated. A full assessment is an important step for disease control priorities, particularly in Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the greatest number of NTDs may occur.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19707588 PMCID: PMC2727001 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa.
| Percentage of SSA population living on less than US$1.25 per day | 51% |
| Total SSA population living on less than $1.25 per day | 390.6 million |
| Percentage of world's population living on less than US$1.25 per day in SSA | 28% |
| Percentage of SSA population living on less than US$2 per day | 73% |
| Total SSA population living on less than $2 per day | 556.7 million |
| Percentage of world's population living on less than US$2 per day in SSA | 22% |
From reference [2].
Ranking of Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) in SSA by Prevalence and Distribution.
| Disease | Estimated Population Infected in SSA | Estimated % of SSA Population Infected | Estimated % Global Disease Burden in SSA | Reference |
| Hookworm | 198 million | 29% | 34% |
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| Schistosomiasis | 192 million | 25% | 93% |
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| Ascariasis | 173 million | 25%a | 21%2b |
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| Trichuriasis | 162 million | 24% | 27% |
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| Lymphatic filariasis | 46–51 million | 6%–9% | 37%–44% |
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| Onchocerciasis | 37 million | 5% | >99% |
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| Active trachoma | 30 million | 3% | 48% |
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| Loiasis | ≤13 million | 1%–2% | 100% |
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| Yellow fever | 180,000 | 0.02% | 90% |
|
| Human African trypanosomiasis | 50,000–70,000 (17,000 new cases annually) | <0.01% | 100% |
|
| Leprosy | 30,055 (registered prevalence); 21,037 new cases in 2007 | <0.01% | 14% |
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| Leishmaniasis (visceral) | 19,000–24,000 new cases annually in Sudan and Ethiopia | <0.01 | ND |
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| Dracunculiasis | 9,585 | <0.01% | 100% |
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| Buruli ulcer | >4,000 | <0.01% | 57% |
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Based on reported 2003 population of 683,330,334 [24]. For all other estimated population prevalence, we use the 2005 value of 764,328,000 published by the United Nations, http://esa.un.org/unpp/, and querying sub-Saharan Africa and 2005, accessed July 29, 2009.
Calculated from global burden data from [48].
The lower value is from [3],[26],[27]; the higher value from [25].
Geographic Distribution and Estimated Burden of the Major Helminth NTDs in SSA.
| Disease (Number of Cases in SSA) | Country with Highest Prevalence | Country with Second Highest Prevalence | Country with Third Highest Prevalence | Country with Fourth Highest Prevalence | Reference |
| Hookworm infection (198 million) | Nigeria 38 million | DR Congo 31 million | Angola and Ethiopia 11 million cases each | Cote d'Ivoire 10 million |
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| Schistosomiasis (192 million) | Nigeria 29 million | Tanzania 19 million | DR Congo and Ghana 15 million cases each | Mozambique 13 million |
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| Ascariasis (173 million) | Nigeria 55 million | Ethiopia 26 million | DR Congo 23 million | South Africa 12 million |
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| Trichuriasis (162 million) | Nigeria 34 million | DR Congo 26 million | South Africa 22 million | Ethiopia 21 million |
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| Lymphatic filariasis (382–394 million at risk) | Nigeria 106 million at risk | DR Congo 49 million at risk | Tanzania 31 million at risk | Ethiopia 30 million at risk, Kenya 29 million at risk |
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| Trachoma (30 million) | Ethiopia 10.3 million | Sudan 3.6 million | Tanzania 2.1 million | Kenya and Niger 2.0 million cases each |
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| Yellow fever (180,000) | Cote d'Ivoire 16 reported cases in 2006 | Mali 5 reported cases in 2006 | Cameroon, CAR, Ghana, and Guinea 1 case each in 2006 |
| |
| Human African trypanosomiasis (50,000–70,000) | DR Congo 10,369 | Angola 2,280 | Sudan 1,766 | Congo 839 |
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| Leprosy (30,055) | DR Congo 6,502 | Nigeria 5,381 | Ethiopia 4,611 | Mozambique 1,830 |
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| Leishmaniasis (visceral) (19,000–24,000 new cases) | Sudan 15,000–20,000 new cases | Ethiopia 4,000 new cases | Kenya and Uganda not determined |
| |
| Dracunculiasis (9,585) | Sudan 5,815 | Ghana 3,358 | Mali 313 | Nigeria and Niger<100 cases each |
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| Buruli ulcer (>4,000) | Cote d'Ivoire 2,000 | Benin and Ghana 1,000 each |
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Major NTDs with No Regional Prevalence or Incidence Estimates in SSA.
| Helminth Infections | Protozoan Infections | Bacterial Infections | Viral Infections | Other Conditions |
| Strongyloidiasis | Amebiasis | Bovine tuberculosis | Dengue fever | Podoconiosis |
| Taeniaisis | Toxoplasmosis | Tick-borne relapsing fever | Rift Valley fever | |
| Paragonimiasis | African tick-bite fever | Chikungunya | ||
| Oesophagostomiasis | Typhoid fever | Rabies | ||
| Non-typhoidal salmonellosis | ||||
| Yaws |
Disease Burden (DALYs) in SSA Resulting from the NTDs.
| Disease | Estimated Global Disease Burden in DALYs | Estimated % Disease Burden in SSA | Estimated SSA Disease Burden in DALYs | Reference |
| Hookworm | 1.5–22.1 million | 34% | 0.5–7.5 million |
|
| Schistosomiasis | 1.7–4.5 million | 93% | 1.6–4.2 million |
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| Ascariasis | 1.8–10.5 million | 21% | 0.4–2.2 million |
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| Lymphatic filariasis | 5.8 million | 35% | 2.0 million |
|
| Trichuriasis | 1.8–6.4 million | 27% | 0.5–1.7 million |
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| Human African trypanosomiasis | 1.5 million | 100% | 1.5 million |
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| Trachoma | 2.3 million | 52% | 1.2 million |
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| Onchocerciasis | 0.5 million | 99% | 0.5 million |
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| Leishmaniasis | 2.1 million | 18% | 0.4 million |
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| Leprosy | 0.2 million | 14% | 0.02 million |
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| Dengue | 0.6 million | <1% | 0.005 million |
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| Total NTDs | ≤56.6 million | 15%–37% | 8.6 million–21.2 million |
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DALY estimates for STH infections and schistosomiasis were obtained by adjusting a wide range of available global estimates according to the percentage of the total number of cases that occur in SSA, while for the other NTDs the disease burdens were quoted directly from WHO estimates.
Ranking by Disease Burden (DALYs) and Comparison of Total NTDs with HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria.
| Disease | Disease Burden in SSA (DALYs) | Reference |
| HIV/AIDS | 64.0 million |
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| Malaria | 40.9 million |
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| NTDs | 8.6–21.2 million | |
| Helminth infections | 5.4–18.3 million | |
| Tuberculosis | 9.3 million |
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