| Literature DB >> 23895635 |
Qi Zheng1, Samantha Vanderslott, Bin Jiang, Li-Li Xu, Cong-Shan Liu, Le-Le Huo, Li-Ping Duan, Ning-Bo Wu, Shi-Zhu Li, Zhi-Gui Xia, Wei-Ping Wu, Wei Hu, Hao-Bing Zhang.
Abstract
This scoping review analyzes the research gaps of three diseases: schistosomiasis japonica, malaria and echinococcosis. Based on available data in the P.R. China, we highlight the gaps between control capacity and prevalence levels, and between diagnostic/drug development and population need for treatment at different stages of the national control programme. After reviewing the literature from 848 original studies and consultations with experts in the field, the gaps were identified as follows. Firstly, the malaria research gaps include (i) deficiency of active testing in the public community and no appropriate technique to evaluate elimination, (ii) lack of sensitive diagnostic tools for asymptomatic patients, (iii) lack of safe drugs for mass administration. Secondly, gaps in research of schistosomiasis include (i) incongruent policy in the implementation of integrated control strategy for schistosomiasis, (ii) lack of effective tools for Oncomelania sp. snail control, (iii) lack of a more sensitive and cheaper diagnostic test for large population samples, (iv) lack of new drugs in addition to praziquantel. Thirdly, gaps in research of echinococcosis include (i) low capacity in field epidemiology studies, (ii) lack of sanitation improvement studies in epidemic areas, (iii) lack of a sensitivity test for early diagnosis, (iv) lack of more effective drugs for short-term treatment. We believe these three diseases can eventually be eliminated in mainland China if all the research gaps are abridged in a short period of time.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23895635 PMCID: PMC3751495 DOI: 10.1186/2049-9957-2-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Figure 1Different stages of the national control programme for three parasitic diseases in China.
Figure 2Results of the search strategy. (Abbreviation: Ma instead for Malaria; Sj instead for Schistosomiasis japonica; Ec instead for Echinococcosis).
Prevalence data collected from relevant articles for three main parasitic diseases in China
| Malaria (154) | Survey for humans | 154 | 13 (15.1%) | 27 (31.4%) | 24 (27.9%) | 21 (24.4) | 1 (1.1%) | 110958 | 0.06% | 0.00062% (0-0.2%) |
| Survey for mosquito | 6 | 0 | 2 (33.3%) | 2 (33.3%) | 2 (33.3%) | 0 | 72776 | - | 0.009% | |
| Survey for animal(definitive host) | 1 | 1 (100%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 328 | 3.4% | - | |
| Schistosomisis (238) | Survey for human | 238 | 53 (22.2%) | 86 (36.1%) | 61 (25.6%) | 33 (13.8%) | 5 (2.1%) | 192061 | 14.2% (0–60.1%) | 3.5 % (0–17.9%) |
| Survey for Oncomelania hupensis | 61 | 9 (14.7%) | 18 (29.51%) | 18 (29.51%) | 13 (21.3%) | 3 (4.9%) | 57251 | - | 0.26% (0-1.2%) | |
| Survey for animal(definitive host) | 75 | 23 (30.6%) | 26 (34.6%) | 18 (24.0%) | 8 (10.6%) | 0 (0.0%) | 49773 | - | 3.81% (0–28.5%) | |
| Echinococcosis (68) | Survey for human | 68 | 21 (30.9%) | 41 (60.3%) | 6 (8.8%) | 0 | 0 | 6022 | 20.8% (8.9-55.2%) | 7.40% (0.15%-29.3%) |
| Survey for pika, mice, livestock | 40 | 21 (62.5%) | 13 (35.0%) | 1 (2.5%) | 0 | 0 | 4016 | - | 24.9% (2.4%-54.9%) | |
| Survey for animal (definitive host) | 18 | 14 (77.8%) | 3 (16.7%) | 1 (5.5%) | 0 | 0 | 1609 | 39.2% (12.6-83.0%) | 26.5% (1.0-70.4%) | |
Figure 3New Case Report of malaria in China (Year 2004–2012).
Figure 4The number of acute cases of schistosomiasis japonica in China (Year 2004–2012).
Figure 5New Ccse reports of echinococcosis in P.R China (Year 2004–2012).
Diagnosis data collected from relevant articles for three main parasitic diseases in China
| | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malaria | 26* | GICA(9) | 88.4-95.5% | 95.7-100% | 547 | 35 | GICA (9) | 16 | 19 | 11/35 | 24/35 |
| ICA(14) | 74.2-98.6% | 91.3-100% | 938 | ||||||||
| PCR(10) | 96.1-99.6% | 98.8-100% | 167 | ||||||||
| LAMP(2) | 98.3-98.8% | 100% | 46 | ||||||||
| Schistosomiasis | 55* | COPT(3) | 90.0-91.8% | 95.3-97.4% | 89 | 52 | Candidate Recombination Protein Finding (28) | 41 | 11 | 44/52 | 8/52 |
| DDIA(8) | 75.3-97.1% | 55.1-99.0% | 755 | ||||||||
| DIGFA(9) | 92.0-100% | 92.2-97.5% | 556 | ||||||||
| ELISA(25) | 65.8-98.4% | 51.7-100% | 716 | ||||||||
| IHA(32) | 69.6-97.3% | 63.6-97.8% | 743 | ||||||||
| PCR(4) | 100% | 100% | 52 | ||||||||
| Others(6) | 85.5-98.5% | 76.3-97.0% | 85 | ||||||||
| Echinococcosis | 9* | IHA(4) | 87.1-92.7% | 69.5-91.6% | 315 | 24 | DIGFA (6) | 8 | 16 | 5/24 | 19/24 |
| DIGFA(2) | 56.7-93.2% | 79.1-95.0% | 180 | ||||||||
| ELISA(8) | 59.3%-91.2% | 93.8-100% | 289 | ||||||||
| Others(3) | 32.5%-76.9% | 41.3-81.6% | 42 | ||||||||
Note: *More than one diagnosis method was used in one article.
Abbreviation: COPT Circum oval precipitating test, DDIA Dipstick dye immuno-assay, DIGFA Dot immunogold filtration assay, ELISA Enzyme-linked immunosorbent Assay, IHA Indirect hemagglutination assay, ELIB Enzyme-linked immuno-electrotransfer blot, ICA immunochromatographic, GICA Gold immunochromatography assay, LAMP Loop-medicated isothermal amplification.
Chemotherapy data collected from relevant articles for three main parasitic diseases in China
| Malaria | 51* | Dihydroartemisinin (31) | 70%-100% | 104 (15–1205) | 50 | 0 | 50/50 | 0/50 |
| Artemether (30) | 79.8%-100% | |||||||
| Piperaquine (19) | 80%-100% | |||||||
| Artesunate (18) | 90.7%-100% | |||||||
| Chloroquine (9) | 62.8%-100% | |||||||
| Primaquine (9) | 85.5%-100% | |||||||
| Artemether-lumefantrine (1) | 82.50% | |||||||
| Schistosomiasis | 22 | Praziquantel (22) | 74.7%-100% | 221 (33–615) | 42 | 0 | 42/42 | 0/42 |
| Echinococcosis | 11* | Albendazole emulsion (7) | 57.1%-83.1% | 95 (36–264) | 11 | 9 | 11/20 | 9/20 |
| Albendazole tablet (6) | 15.8%-31.3% | 57 (24–108) | ||||||
* More than one kind of drug can be studied in one article.
Gaps of control capacity and diagnostic/drug development presented in total 4 consultation meetings
| Malaria | 1 | Need new diagnosis method for asymptomatic patients |
| 2 | Need innovative and safer drugs | |
| 3 | Lack of techniques to distinguish abroad-imported cases from indigenous cases | |
| 4 | Difficulty in finding asymptomatic patients | |
| 5 | Need new surveillance system for pre-elimination period | |
| 6 | More focus on the continuously increasing imported cases | |
| Schistosomiasis japonica | 1 | Need higher sensitive antigen testing |
| 2 | Need new drug which can prevent reinfection | |
| 3 | Need new molluscicide with less negative impact on the environment and biodiversity | |
| 4 | Difficulty in testing for a moving population | |
| 5 | Need innovative surveillance-response approaches system | |
| 6 | Difficulty in controlling for more than 40 hosts | |
| Echinococcosis | 1 | Need effective drug for short-term treatment |
| 2 | Need financial support for hygiene and sanitation in epidemic areas | |
| 3 | Need long-acting antihelmintic implants or drugs to control dog infection | |
| 4 | Need effective vaccine for people in epidemic areas | |
| 5 | Need more sensitive serological test for field survey | |
| 6 | Control of the wildlife transmission cycles of E multilocularis is difficult |
Recommendations for overcome gaps of control capacity and diagnostic/drug development reported in this article
| Malaria | Epidemic control | Need more active surveillance for early detection | More precise prediction by statistical model and geographical information systems (GIS). Set up active surveillance and response system to prevent reestablishment of transmission. |
| No appropriate techniques to evaluate elimination | Set up clonal germplasm repository for plasmodium and its vectors. Find specific biomarker to distinguish different geographic strain. | ||
| Diagnosis | Need new diagnosis method for asymptomatic patient | Find new candidate biomarkers. Quality sampling for diagnostic kits before large-scale testing in field. | |
| Chemotherapy | Need innovative and safer drugs | Accelerate the validation and standardization for candidate drugs. Strengthen international cooperation in new drug development. | |
| Schistosomiasis japonica | Epidemic control | Need effective tools for | Develop diagnostic assays for the large-scale screening of specific snails. Use GIS for prediction of snail distribution. Develop new snail interventions. |
| Need policy support to protect the execution of control strategy | Coordinate by local government. Give full administration enforcement rights to the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. | ||
| Diagnosis | Need more sensitive and cheaper diagnostic test for large population sampling. | Find new candidate biomarkers. Focus on innovation of immune complex dissociation procedure to increase the sensitivity of detection. | |
| Chemotherapy | Need new drugs in addition to praziquantel. | Accelerate the validation and standardization for candidate drugs. Strengthen international cooperation in new drug development. | |
| Echinococcosis | Epidemic control | The execution for control echinococcosis is not satisfying. | Coordinate by local government. Give proper administration enforcement right to the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention. |
| Manpower restrictions in echinococcosis control | Larger personnel force for echinococcosis control. More professional training for echinococcosis control. | ||
| Not enough support for hygiene and sanitation in epidemic areas. | Government increase in financial support on hygiene and sanitation improvement in these areas. Strengthen health education on echinococcosis prevention. | ||
| Diagnosis | Need more sensitive test for early diagnosis | Undertake a comparative study of all the available antibody detection to form guidelines for large-scale scanning. Find new candidate biomarkers. | |
| Chemotherapy | Need more effective drug for short-term treatment | Accelerate the validation and standardization for candidate drugs. Focus to develop new form of benzimidazole to improve its bioavailability. Strengthen international cooperation in new drug development. |