| Literature DB >> 22523499 |
Sergio Sosa-Estani1, Lisandro Colantonio, Elsa Leonor Segura.
Abstract
This paper reviews the evidence supporting the use of etiological treatment for Chagas disease that has changed the standard of care for patients with Trypanosoma cruzi infection in the last decades. Implications of this evidence on different levels of prevention as well as gaps in current knowledge are also discussed. In this regard, etiological treatment has shown to be beneficial as an intervention for secondary prevention to successfully cure the infection or to delay, reduce, or prevent the progression to disease, and as primary disease prevention by breaking the chain of transmission. Timely diagnosis during initial stages would allow for the prescription of appropriate therapies mainly in the primary health care system thus improving chances for a better quality of life. Based on current evidence, etiological treatment has to be considered as an essential public health strategy useful to reduce disease burden and to eliminate Chagas disease altogether.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22523499 PMCID: PMC3317183 DOI: 10.1155/2012/292138
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Trop Med ISSN: 1687-9686
Indication of treatment against Trypanosoma cruzi infection based on different levels of quality of evidences and tools to assess efficacy or failure.
| Indication (strength of the recommendation, and level of evidence) | Drug | Efficacy† | Time elapsed | Failure‡ | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute phase: | Bz, Nftx | 65–100% | 8 months or more | 5% | Medium term of followup to asses efficacy |
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| Early chronic phase (children) ((A) I) [ | Bz | 50–70% | 3–15 years | 5% | Most of the cases were children under 12 yo. |
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| Late chronic phase (adults, indeterminate, cardiac/digestive/other diseases) ((B) II; (C) II) [ | Bz, Nftx | 30% | >20 years | 10% | Long term of followup |
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| Pregnant ((E) III) [ | NA | NA | NA | NA | Some accidental or necessary treatment during pregnant with acute phase did not show damaging effect in the child |
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| Immunocompromised (i.e., HIV, Transplant, other) ((A) II) [ | Bz, Nftx | ND | ND | <5% | Etiological treatment aborts severe forms of reactivation as meningoencephalitis, myocarditis, panniculitis, and so forth, |
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| Accidents ((B) III) [ | Bz, Nftx | NA | NA | NA | 10–15 days treatment immediately after accidents avoid infection |
†Maximum rate of seronegativization.
‡Maximum rate of positive parasitologic test after treatment.
Bz: benznidazole, NA: not applicable, ND: no data, Nftx: nifurtimox.
Figure 1Timeline of side effects of benznidazole and nifurtimox.