| Literature DB >> 22533927 |
Andrew Hall1, Yaobi Zhang, Chad Macarthur, Shawn Baker.
Abstract
There are strong and direct relationships between undernutrition and the disease caused by infectious organisms, including the diverse pathogens labeled as neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). Undernutrition increases the risk of infection, the severity of disease and the risk that children will die, while the physical damage, loss of appetite, and host responses during chronic infection can contribute substantially to undernutrition. These relationships are often synergistic. This opinion article examines the role of nutrition in controlling NTDs and makes the point that mass drug treatment--the major strategy currently proposed to control several diseases--is crucial to controlling disease and transmission, but is only the start of the process of physical recovery. Without adequate energy and nutrients to repair damaged tissues or recover lost growth and development, the benefits of treatment may not be evident quickly; the effects of control programs may be not appreciated by beneficiaries; while vulnerability to reinfection and disease may not be reduced. There is substantial potential for nutritional interventions to be added to large-scale programs to deliver drug treatments and thereby contribute, within a broad strategy of public health interventions and behavior change activities, to controlling and preventing NTDs in populations, and to restoring their health.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22533927 PMCID: PMC3378428 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-10-41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
The main neglected tropical diseases for which there are single dose treatments available for disease control.
| Group | Generic name or disease | Species | Geographical | Vector or intermediate host | Main drugs available to treat infections | Control measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nematode | Large roundworm | Worldwide | None, as | Albendazole | Sanitation, | |
| Whipworm | ||||||
| Hookworm | Worldwide | Sanitation, | ||||
| Hookworm | ||||||
| Nematode | Lymphatic filariasis | Worldwide | Mosquitoes | DEC or Ivermectin + | Mosquito | |
| Lymphatic filariasis | South Asia | |||||
| Nematode | River blindness | Africa, South America | Black flies | Ivermectin | Black fly control | |
| Trematode | Urinary schistosomiasis | Africa | Fresh-water snails | Praziquantel | Snail control, sanitation and behavior change | |
| Intestinal | Africa, South America | |||||
| Intestinal | Asia | |||||
| Bacterium | Trachoma | Worldwide | Fliesa | Azithromycin or Tetracycline | Fly control, | |
aNo developmental stage, transmission is passive.
Figure 1The association between the number of neglected tropical diseases in 47 countries in Africa [62]and the average prevalence of anemia in children aged < 5 years and pregnant women [71], and the average prevalence of underweight in children aged < 5 year [72].
Figure 2A conceptual model of the relationship between host susceptibility and pathogen virulence, first proposed by Scrimshaw and colleagues [12]. The horizontal line represents the natural range in host susceptibility while the vertical line represents the natural range in pathogen virulence. As both are genetically modulated, nutrition is likely to have little or no effect at the extremes: when a pathogen is virulent or avirulent, or when the host is highly susceptible or insusceptible. Nutrition is most likely to have an effect when virulence and susceptibility are intermediate so that other factors may act. This is represented as the shaded area in the centre because the probability that nutrition has an effect on both characteristics is greatest in the middle of both ranges.
Figure 3A diagrammatic flow chart of categories of individuals in the processes of becoming infected, immune, and diseased, and the points at which nutrition may act, shown as arrows with letters indicating points of discussion in the text.
The cost of single dose treatments for some neglected tropical diseases and of several treatments for malnutrition.
| Disease or condition | Treatment | Unit | Annual treatment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intestinal nematode worms | Albendazole | 400 mg tab | 1-2 tabs | 0.02 - 0.04b |
| Mebendazole | 500 mg tab | 1-2 tabs | 0.03 - 0.06b | |
| Schistosomiasis | Praziquantel | 600 mg tab | 1-3 tabs | 0.10 - 0.30 |
| Onchocerciasis | Ivermectin | 3 mg tab | 1-3 tabs | 1.50 - 4.50c |
| Trachoma | Azithromycin | 500 mg tab | 0.5-2.0 tabs | 0.11 - 0.44 |
| Vitamin A deficiency | Retinol | 200,000 IU capsule | 2 capsules, | 0.04 |
| Micronutrient deficiencies | Multiple micronutrientsd | Tablets | 24-36 tabs over 3 months | 0.39 - 0.59 |
| Thinness and micronutrient deficiencies in schoolchildren | Micronutrient fortified biscuits | Approx 75 g (300 kcal) per day | 200 days per year | 2.66 - 15.92e |
| Wasting and growth faltering in children aged 1-5 years | Ready-to-use therapeutic food | 92 g (500 kcal) | 30-60 sachets per child | 10.80 - 21.60 |
aPurchase costs of treatments except ivermectin from UNICEF Supply Branch, June 2011.
bNow available free from GSK by application through the WHO.
cNominal list price from Merck, but free under Mectizan donation program [51].
dFormulation for pregnant women, so typically given two to three times a week to school-age children.
ePurchase costs derived from Gelli et al. [52] using WFP data; range is for different countries.
Figure 4A conceptual model of the main components of an integrated neglected tropical disease control program.