| Literature DB >> 25680190 |
Ana Requena-Méndez1, Edelweiss Aldasoro1, Elisa de Lazzari1, Elisa Sicuri1, Michael Brown2, David A J Moore2, Joaquim Gascon1, Jose Muñoz1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Few studies have assessed the burden of Chagas disease in non-endemic countries and most of them are based on prevalence estimates from Latin American (LA) countries that likely differ from the prevalence in migrants living in Europe. The aim of this study was to systematically review the existing data informing current understanding of the prevalence of Chagas disease in LA migrants living in European countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25680190 PMCID: PMC4332678 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003540
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Flow diagram for study selection.
Main characteristics of the studies included in the meta-analysis.
| Author | Country | Study Year | Study type | Sampling characteristics | Age | Diagnostic method | Prevalence (%) | n | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angheben | Italy | 2008-? / 2008–2009 | Blood bank/ Antenatal care | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | Immunochromatographic assay (Chagas Quick Test, Cypress Diagnostics, Belgium); BioELISA Chagas, Biokit S.A., Spain; DRG CHAGAS IgG, Germany | 0 | 245 | [ |
| Avila-Arzanegui | Spain | Dec 2008—Jan 2010 | Antenatal care | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | Indirect immunofluorescence (MarDx, Inc. Trinity Biotech plc Bray, Co. Wicklow, Ireland); ELISA | 12 | 158 | [ |
| Barona-Vilar | Spain | 2009–2010 | Antenatal care | Multicentre retrospective cross-sectional survey of microbiological records | Adult | Ortho1 T. cruzi ELISA, Test System, (Johnson & Johnson, USA); Chagatek ELISA, (bioMerieux, France) and | 11.6 | 1945 | [ |
| El Ghouzzi | France | April 2007- Oct 2008 | Blood bank | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | ELISA cruzi, manufactured by bioMérieux Brazil S.A (Estrada do Mapuã, Jacarepaguã, RJ, Brazil); Bioelisa CHAGAS (Biokit, Lliçà d’Amunt, Spain) | 0.3 | 972 | [ |
| Frank | Germany | May—August 1995 | Community study | Religious support group of Latin Americans recruited at their meetings. Informed consent sought. | Adult | Indirect immunofluorescence test (IIF) using fixed epimastigotes (Bits/Germany) as antigen; In house ELISA for | 2 | 100 | [ |
| Gabrielli | Italy | 2010–2012 | Blood bank | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | Immunochromatographic assay (ICT) (Chagas Quick Test, Cypress Diagnostics, Langdorp, Belgium; BioELISA Chagas, Biokit S.A., Barcelona, Spain; NovaLisa Chagas ELISA test, Nova Tec Immunodiagnostica, GmbH, Dietzenbach, Germany | 0.98 | 102 | [ |
| Jackson | Switzerland | Jun- Dec 2008 | Primary health care and community study | Prospective recruitment in primary care unit. Community outreach: active case finding in cultural centres, churches and migrant associations. Recruitment sessions in churches attended by migrants. | >16 y | ELISA cruzi, Biomérieux, Brazil and Bioelisa Chagas, Biokit, Spain), | 12.85 | 1012 | [ |
| Orti-Lucas | Spain | Feb 2005—Jul 2007 | Antenatal care | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | Immunoprecipitación particle gel immuno assay—Diamed (IP) (reference BO20011–01.04); Indirect immunofluorescence, Immunoflour Chagas—Inverness Medical (reference 20–03648; ELISA Dade Behering (reference CHAG0560DB) | 9.69 | 382 | [ |
| Martinez de Tejada | Switzerland | 2008 | Antenatal care | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | Immunofluorescence in house | 1.97 | 305 | [ |
| Muñoz-Vilches | Spain | April 2007—April 2011 | Antenatal care | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | ELISA-in house (ELISA-CNM Centro Nacional de Microbiología-); Indirect immunofluorescence assay, IFI-in house (IFI-CNM) | 1.53 | 261 | [ |
| Muñoz | Spain | March 2005—Sept 2007 | Antenatal care | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | BioELISA Chagas; Biokit S.A, Spain; In house ELISA (crude antigen from | 3.41 | 1350 | [ |
| Navarro | Spain | May 2008—Dec 2009 | Community study | Non-governmental organisations and migrants’ associations promoted talks on the disease to migrants in different community settings. | Adult | Rapid immunochromatographic test (Simple Chagas WB, Operon); Filter paper sent to the National Microbiology Centre for confirmation: using Indirect fluorescent antibody technique and ELISA assay. | 15.94 | 276 | [ |
| Patricio Talayero | Spain | 2005–2007 | Antenatal care | Prospective general screening No active community outreach | Adult | Immunoprecipitation, ID-PaGIA Chagas Antibody Test, (reference B020011–01.04 de Diamed-Id); Indirect immunofluorescence (Innogenetics, ref. 20–03648) | 4.65 | 624 | [ |
| Piron | Spain | Sept 2005—Sept 2006 | Blood bank | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | Particle gel immunoassay (ID-PaGIA, DiaMed, Cressier surMorat, Switzerland); Chagas bioelisa assay (Biokit, Lliçá d’Amunt, Spain) | 0.66 | 1770 | [ |
| Ramosa | Spain | 2006–2010 | Antenatal | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | Particle gel immunoassay (ID-PaGIA, DiaMed, Cressier surMorat, Switzerland); Chagas bioelisa assay (Biokit, Lliçá d’Amunt, Spain) | 1.28 | 545 | [ |
| Ramosb | Spain | Nov 2009—Nov 2010 | Community study | Informal links with migrants’ and migrants’ associations through social and cultural activities to deliver information and conduct recruitment | Adult | In-house ELISA (antigen prepared from epimastigotes obtained from a culture of the stationary phase of two strains of | 6.47 | 201 | [ |
| Roca | Spain | Oct 2007—Oct 2009 | Primary Health care | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | Adult | Immunochromatographic test (ICT) that uses recombinant antigens of | 2.87 | 766 | [ |
| Soriano | Spain | March 2006—March 2007 | Primary Health Care | Prospective general screening. No active community outreach | 15–45 y | Chagas bioelisa assay (Biokit, Lliçá d’Amunt, Spain); In-house ELISA (epimastigote antigens obtained by sonication from the epimastigote forms of the Maracay strains of | 4.31 | 116 | [ |
Heterogeneity of pooled prevalence estimates of Chagas disease by type of study recruitment setting.
| Positive | Screened | Prevalence (%) | 95% CI. | % weight (random) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PHC | 216 | 2471 | 8.7 | 7.7–9.9 | 33.27 |
| blood donors | 14 | 2629 | 0.5 | 0.3–0.9 | 33.29 |
| pregnancy | 374 | 5784 | 6.5 | 5.8–7.1 | 33.43 |
| Random Effects Pooled Prevalence | 604 | 10884 | 4.2 | 0.7–10.8 | 100.00 |
TEST FOR HETEROGENEITY
Q Heterogeneity chi-squared = 319.05 (d.f. = 2) p = 0·0000
I2 (variation in Prevalence attributable to heterogeneity) = 99.4%
Moment-based estimate of between-study variance Tau2 = 0.0479
Country-specific prevalence of Chagas disease by type of study and values of results of heterogeneity tests among different type of studies.
| Prevalence PHC*/Community studies (95% CI) | Prevalence Blood bank studies (95% CI) | Prevalence Antenatal studies (95% CI) | HeterogeneityI2 | p-value (Q Heterogeneity chi-squared) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 2.6 (0.3–9.2) | 0.5 (0.1–1.9) | 2.8(1.5–4.9) | 72.4 | 0.03 |
|
| 21.6 (19–24.4) | 10.7 (4.7–19. 9) | 26.5 (24–29) | 87.4 | <0.001 |
|
| 0.4 (0–2) | 0 (0–1.1) | 0.9 (0.2–2.6) | 46.4 | 0.2 |
|
| 0 (0–0.1) | 0 (0–2.1) | 1.3 (0–6.8) | 5.3 | 0.3 |
|
| 0 (0–1.9) | 0 (0–0.7) | 0.7 (0.2–1.4) | 65.5 | 0.06 |
|
| 0 (0–1.3) | 0.4 (0–2.2) | 0.4 (01–0.8) | 0 | 0.5 |
|
| 0 (0–30.8) | 9.1 (1.1–29.2) | 0 (0–0.1) | 43.8 | 0·2 |
|
| 0 (0–9.7) | 0 (0–21.8) | 3.5 (0.7–10) | .0 | 0.4 |
|
| 0 | 0 | 0 | - | - |
|
| 0 (0–14.2) | 0 (0–28.5) | 6.7 (0.2–31.9) | 0 | 0.4 |
|
| 3.9 (1.6–7.8) | 4.5 (0.1–22.8) | 6 (3.1–10.6) | 0 | 0.7 |
|
| 0.3 (0–1.9) | 0 (0–1.6) | 0.6 (0.1–1.7) | 0 | 0.4 |
|
| 0 | 0 | 0 | - | - |
|
| 0 | 0 | 0 | - | - |
95% CI—95% confidence interval; All country test for heterogeneity: Q Heterogeneity chi-squared = 319.1 (d.f. = 2), p< 0. 001, I2 (variation in Prevalence attributable to heterogeneity) = 99.4%, Moment-based estimate of between-study variance Tau2 = 0.05;
1: I2 index of heterogeneity 79.5%;
2: I2 index of heterogeneity 0%;
3: I2 index of heterogeneity 51.5%;
4: I2 index of heterogeneity 79.4%;
5: I2 index of heterogeneity 0%;
6: I2 index of heterogeneity 85.1%
Pooled T. cruzi prevalence by country of origin in Latin American migrants from European countries.
| Country | Number screened | Number of seropositives | Country-specific prevalence | 95% CI | Prevalence in country of origin (National level) PAHO (%)[ | Prevalence ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 875 | 16 | 2.2 | 0.80–4·13 | 4.13 | 0.53 |
|
| 2264 | 541 | 18 | 13.9–22.66 | 6.75 | 2.67 |
|
| 954 | 4 | 0.6 | 0.16–1.12 | 1.02 | 0.59 |
|
| 290 | 1 | 1 | 0.17–2.36 | 0.99 | 1.01 |
|
| 1627 | 6 | 0.5 | 0.15–0.92 | 0.96 | 0.52 |
|
| 2131 | 7 | 0.4 | 0.18–0.72 | 1.74 | 0.23 |
|
| 67 | 2 | 3.7 | 1.62–11.7 | 3.37 | 1.10 |
|
| 136 | 3 | 4.2 | 1.27–7.36 | 3.05 | 1.38 |
|
| 166 | 0 | 1.5 | 0.24–3.76 | 1.03 | 1.46 |
|
| 50 | 1 | 4.6 | 0.76–11.3 | 1.14 | 4.04 |
|
| 385 | 19 | 5.5 | 3.46–7.91 | 2.54 | 2.17 |
|
| 1029 | 4 | 0.6 | 0.23–1.18 | 0.69 | 0.87 |
|
| 248 | 0 | 0.8 | 0.08–2.24 | 0.66 | 1.21 |
|
| 311 | 0 | 0.9 | 0.16–2.22 | 1.16 | 0.78 |
CI: Confidence Interval; PAHO: Pan American Health Organization;
*Weighted prevalence with Random effect model;
^ although there was not any reported case of Chagas disease in migrants coming from this country, the weighted prevalence is not “0” due to the Random Effect model
Fig 2Forest plots of prevalence of Chagas disease by country of origin of Latin American migrants.