| Literature DB >> 28103250 |
Oriol Mitjà1,2, Michael Marks3,4, Laia Bertran1, Karsor Kollie5, Daniel Argaw6, Ahmed H Fahal7, Christopher Fitzpatrick6, L Claire Fuller8, Bernardo Garcia Izquierdo9, Roderick Hay8, Norihisa Ishii10, Christian Johnson11, Jeffrey V Lazarus1, Anthony Meka12, Michele Murdoch13, Sally-Ann Ohene14, Pam Small15, Andrew Steer16, Earnest N Tabah17, Alexandre Tiendrebeogo18, Lance Waller19, Rie Yotsu20, Stephen L Walker3, Kingsley Asiedu6.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28103250 PMCID: PMC5245794 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005136
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Characteristics of skin NTDs.
| Causative agent | Mode of transmission | Natural reservoir | Geographic distribution by continent/region (Major affected countries) | Key manifestation | Complications | Peak age (male: female ratio) | Incidence (annual) year 6–13 | WHO target by 2020 | WHA resolution | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unknown | Contaminated water | West and Central Africa, Western Pacific | Skin ulcer | Severe scarring with limb contractures | 5–15 (2:1) | 2,200 | Control | WHA57.1 (2004) | ||
| Sand fly vectors | Rodents, Hyraxes | Middle East, West and East Africa, Mediterranean basin, and South-America | Skin ulcer, papules, nodules or plaques, | Disseminated skin disease and significant facial destruction | All ages (1:1) | 700,000 | Control | WHA60.13 (2007) | ||
| Filariae such as | Anopheles, Culex and Aedes mosquitoes | Human | Worldwide distribution | Lower limb oedema | Lymphoedema and elephantiasis | Adults (ND) | 970,000 | Elimination as public health problem | WHA50.29 (1997) | |
| Blackfly Simulium vectors | Human | West, Central and East Africa, foci in Latin America | Itchy papules, vesicles, pustules, papulonodules or plaques Subcutaneous nodules; hanging groin | Impetigo Physical appearance, nuisance, psychological impact, stigma | Children and adults (ND) Adults (ND) | NA | Elimination in selected countries in Africa | NA | ||
| Probably respiratory route | Human | Worldwide distribution (India, Brazil, Bangladesh, Indonesia, DRC, Ethiopia and Nigeria) | Skin patches/nodules, Thickened nerves, Sensory and/or motor disturbance | Peripheral neuropathy and permanent damage of the limbs, eyes and nose | 5–15 and 20–40 (1.5:1) | 215,000 | Elimination as public health problem | WHA51.15 (1998) | ||
| Fungal or bacterial species | Inoculation via contaminated thorn or splinter | Soil | Worldwide distribution (Sudan, Mexico and India) | Subcutaneous mass with sinuses and discharge | Local destruction of subcutaneous tissue | All ages (3:1 to 5:1) | Unknown | Control | WHA69.21 (2016) | |
| Direct contact | Human | West and Central Africa and South Pacific | Skin ulcer | Involvement of the bones and joints | 2–15 (1.5:1) | 60,000 | Eradication | WHA31.58 (1978) |
An example of key diagnostic signs for identification of targeted diseases.
| Key sign identified by HCW or village volunteer | Diagnostic criteria utilised by HCW or referral centre | Common differential diagnosis |
|---|---|---|
| Presence of ulcerative lesions with or without crusts | Buruli ulcer, Cutaneous leishmaniasis, Yaws, Tropical ulcer, Stasis or venous ulcer | |
| Presence of chronic nodules or papillomatous lesions associated with ulceration | ||
| Edges raised or indurated in CL and yaws; edges undermined in BU | ||
| Indurated painless swelling or mass involving the foot | Mycetoma, Chromoblastomycosis, Buruli ulcer nodule or plaque, Skin cancer, Kaposi’s sarcoma, Onchocercal nodule | |
| History of penetrating injury at the same site or walking barefoot in mycetoma | ||
| Sinus tracts, chronic discharge and grains in mycetoma | ||
| Well-demarcated firm subcutaneous nodule(s) overlying a bony prominence (e.g., iliac crest, trochanters, ribs, sacrum) in onchocerciasis | ||
| Painless non-pitting swelling | Filarial lymphoedema, Podoconiosis, TB lymphadenitis, Leprosy oedema, Buruli ulcer oedema, Congestive heart failure oedema | |
| Presence of a hypopigmented patch | Leprosy, Pityriasis versicolor, Pityriasis alba, Vitiligo | |
| Reduced sensation within the patch in leprosy | ||
| Enlarged nerves in leprosy | ||
| Chronic duration (>3 months) |
HCW, health care worker.
Fig 1Common skin ulcerative lesions related to neglected tropical diseases.
(A) Buruli ulcer with undermined hanging edge, (B) Ill-defined ulcerated infiltrated granulomatous-looking lesions on dorsum of the hand in cutaneous leishmaniasis, (C) Early-stage yaws ulcer with raised edge and “raspberry” type appearance of the central granulation tissue, (D) Multiple yellow-crusted ulcers on the arms in secondary yaws. Images credit: Kingsley Asiedu (A,D), Oriol Mitjà (C), Jorge Postigo (B).
Fig 2Common skin neglected tropical diseases lesions.
(A) Mycetoma with few active sinuses, grains, and discharge, (B) Bilateral lymphoedema of both legs in the late stage of lymphatic filariasis, (C) Hypopigmented anaesthetic macules with infiltrated edge of borderline tuberculoid leprosy. Images credit: Ahmed Fahal (A), CDC Public Health Image library (B), Rie Yotsu (C).
Recommended diagnosis and management of suspected skin lesions.
| Field assessment | Initial management | Laboratory tools | Medical treatment | Supportive measures | Treatment of contacts | Surgery | Prevention of disabilities and rehabilitation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical | Swabbing, registration and referral | PCR of skin swab samples fTLC under development | Oral rifampin + injectable streptomycin or oral clarithromycin for 8 weeks | Wound dressing | No | Yes | Yes | |
| Clinical | Swabbing, registration and referral | Microscopy and PCR of skin swab | Depends on species. Local or systemic therapy. | Wound dressing | No | No | No | |
| Clinical | Registration and referral | ICT antigen test (usually negative), and antifilarial antibodies | Oral diethylcarbamazine for 12 days ± doxycycline for 4 to 6 weeks | Skin barrier function improvement measures | No | Yes | Yes | |
| Clinical | Registration and referral | Skin snips. Serological and antigen tests under development | Oral ivermectin | Pruritic rash -treatment for any itching and secondary infection | If in endemic area | Yes for nodules or hanging groin | No | |
| Clinical | Registration and referral | Slit skin smear or skin biopsy material | Multidrug antibiotic therapy for 6 or 12 months. | Home-based self-inspections and appropriate footwear | Single dose rifampicin is being piloted but is not policy | Yes | Yes | |
| Clinical | Registration and referral | Microscopy examination and culture of grains/biopsy | Depends on species. Long term antibiotic or antifungal. | Skin barrier function improvement measures | No | Yes | Yes | |
| Clinical | Swabbing, and immediate treatment | DPP test and PCR of skin swab | Single oral dose of azithromycin (2nd line: injectable benzathine penicillin) | Wound dressing | Single dose azithromycin | No | No |
fTLC, fluorescent thin layer chromatography; ICT, immunochromatography, DPP, dual path platform yaws assay.