Literature DB >> 30050344

The first report of two cases of cystic echinococcosis in the lung by Echinococcus ortleppi infection, in Vietnam.

Nguyen Van De1, Duyet Le Van2.   

Abstract

In 2013, two cases of infection by Echinococcus that caused cystic echinococcosis in the lungs were reported. In the first case, there was a cyst of 6 × 7 cm in diameter, and in the second case, there were four cysts of 5 × 6 cm, 4 × 4 cm, 3.5 × 3 cm and 2.5 × 2 cm in diameter, respectively. In both cases, Echinococcus larvae were collected from the cysts. The larvae were identified as Echinococcus ortleppi by morphology and a molecular method (using reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide hydrogenase [NADH] with 99%-100% homology compared with E. ortleppi in GenBank). This is the first time that this species has been found in humans in Vietnam.

Entities:  

Keywords:  E. ortleppi; Vietnam; hydatid

Year:  2017        PMID: 30050344      PMCID: PMC6034651          DOI: 10.2147/RRTM.S122014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Res Rep Trop Med        ISSN: 1179-7282


Introduction

Human echinococcosis is a zoonotic infection caused by larval forms (metacestodes) of tapeworms of the genus Echinococcus. The adult stage develops in the small intestine of caniids, and the larval stage develops in the viscera of a variety of mammalian species, including humans.1 At present, nine valid species of the genus Echinococcus have been identified in the world, including E. granulosus sensu stricto (G1 [sheep strain], G2 [Tasmanian sheep strain], G3 [buffalo strain]), E. equinus (G4), E. ortleppi (G5), E. canadensis (G6–G10), E. multilocularis, E. vogeli, E. oligarthrus, E. felidis, and E. shiquicus.2–5 Two of these species are of special medical importance. These are E. granulosus and E. multilocularis, causing cystic echinococcosis and alveolar echinococcosis in humans, respectively.6 The first report of E. ortleppi (genotype G5) was in Italy.7 The adult worm is 3–6 mm in length, including three to four proglottids, and is a common parasite in the intestine of the canine family. Humans are considered aberrant intermediate hosts that acquire the infection through accidental ingestion of parasite eggs that may develop into the larval stage of the parasite (metacestode) in suitable internal organs, mainly the liver and lungs. Growing cysts may also damage surrounding tissues and blood vessels. Any associated clinical problems will be dependent on the number of cysts, their size, location, and rate of growth. The organs most frequently affected are the liver and the lungs in approximately 65% and 25% of cases, respectively.8 The kidneys, spleen, brain, heart, skeletal system, and musculature tissues can also be affected.6 In Italy, the chest X-rays and lung images in 24/28 (85.7%) patients found a total of 149 cysts, mostly with hepatic localization (96%).9 The lifespan of hydatid cysts of E. granulosus can be as long as 16 years in horses10 and 53 years in humans.13 Reports of echinococcosis in humans have been reviewed by Alvarez Rojas et al,12 in livestock by Cardona and Carmena,13 and in domestic dogs and wild carnivores by Carmena and Cardona.14,15 Echinococcosis is distributed almost worldwide and is especially common in such areas as Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand, Southern and Northern Africa, and South America.6 In Asia, echinococcosis has been reported in Japan, China, Korea, Mongolia, Thailand, Indonesia, Bangladesh, and India,16 but not in Vietnam. In 2013, two patients were detected with cystic echinococcosis at the National Hospital of Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases in Hanoi, Vietnam. The main clinical and paraclinical symptoms of the patients were described. In the first patient, samples were collected during surgery for removal of the cyst from the lung, and in the second patient, samples were collected by extracting fluids from the cyst in the lung. Echinococcus antigen in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit was used for detection of Echinococcus-specific antibodies with cutoff OD <0.3. The ELISA test and morphological identification of species were carried out in the Department of Parasitology, Hanoi Medical University, and the molecular methods were performed in the Molecular Diagnostic Laboratory of the National Hospital of Tropical Diseases. The two patients were followed-up for 2 years after their treatments. These patients are the first reported cases of echinococcosis in Vietnam. Both patients provided written consent to have their data and images published.

Case report

Description of the first case

The first patient was a 42-year old male residing in the Thach Dong commune, Thach Thanh District, Thanh Hoa Province, in the mountainous region of northern Vietnam. He is a farmer and had never left the country. He felt chest pains on his right side in January 2013, and this symptom increased for 2 months; at the end of February 2013, he visited the Provincial Hospital and then the National Hospital of Lung Diseases (Hanoi, Vietnam). The main clinical symptom was pain in the right chest, absence of fever, and no cough or other symptoms. Paraclinical symptoms were a big nodular shadow circle form of equal density in the right lobe of the lungs, detected by chest X-ray examination, of 6 × 7 cm size (Figure 1). The leukocyte count was 9,600,000, including neutrophils 57.4%, lymphocytes 20.6%, eosinophils 12.8%, monocytes 8.3%, and basophils 0.9%; positive serodiagnosis was obtained by ELISA test with Echinococcus antigen. This patient was treated by surgery combined with use of albendazole 800 mg/day for 30 days (three dosages), and he was free of symptoms during the follow-up period of 3 months.
Figure 1

A hydatid cyst (6 × 7 cm in diameter, arrow) in the lung of the first patient, detected by X-ray.

Description of the second case

The second patient was a 48-year old female residing in Phu Yen town of the Phu Yen District, Son La Province, also in the mountainous north region of Vietnam. She is a medical technician and had also never left the country. She felt chest pains, along with cough and bloody sputum in June 2013; these symptoms increased for 2 months, and in the middle of August 2013, she visited the Provincial Hospital and then the National Hospital of Lung Diseases (Hanoi, Vietnam). The main clinical symptoms were pain in the chest, dyspnea, and cough with blood, in addition to absence of fever. Paraclinical symptoms were four big nodular shadow circles formed of equal density in both lobes of the lungs, detected by chest X-ray examination, with sizes of 5 × 6 cm, 4 × 4 cm, 3.5 × 3 cm, and 2.5 × 2 cm (Figure 2). The leukocyte count was 8,520,000, including neutrophils 72.0%, lymphocytes 12.9%, eosinophils 8.3%, monocytes 6.7%, and basophils 0.1%; positive serodiagnosis was obtained by ELISA test with Echinococcus antigen. A microscopic examination of the fluid, extracted from the biggest cyst using a disposable syringe, was performed. The results showed the presence of a large number of Echinococcus larvae. Surgery was not done on this patient because the cysts were found in both lungs. However, she was treated with albendazole 800 mg/day for 30 days (six dosages). She was free of chest pain during the follow-up period of 3 months and free of cough after 12 months; however, the cysts had decreased in size (the remaining two cysts only: 3.5 × 2 cm and 2.5 × 1.5 cm in the lungs).
Figure 2

The hydatid cysts (four cysts: 5 × 6 cm, 4 × 4 cm, 3.5 × 3 cm, and 2.5 × 2 cm in diameter, arrows) in the lungs of the second patient, detected by X-ray.

Description of the parasite

In the cysts (cystic echinococcosis) of both patients were many protoscoleces, each of which had many hooks (Figure 3).
Figure 3

The protoscoleces and the hooklets of Vietnamese Echinococcus.

Notes: (A) The larvae observed by microscopy (10×); (B) the larvae observed at 40×; (C) the hooks of the larvae observed at 90×.

The protoscolex is a spherical body of approximately 0.15 × 0.14 mm in diameter, in which an invaginated scolex with 30 hooks and four suckers is contained, and each hook is 22 µm in diameter length (Figure 3). These protoscoleces were analyzed by a molecular method using the gene of NADH hydrogenasa. The result identified them as E. ortleppi with 99–100% homology compared with E. ortleppi in GenBank, but only homology with E. granulosus was 93–94% (Tables 1 and 2). The phylogenetic tree of E. ortleppi Vietnam and other strains derived from part of the NADH dehydrogenase nucleotide sequence and the COX1 gene, determined by neighbor-joining (NJ) method using MEGA5.1,6 showed that the strain of Vietnamese E. ortleppi belongs to the same group as strains of E. ortleppi in GenBank (Figures 4 and 5).
Table 1

Sequencing of NADH dehyrogenase 1 gene of different Echinococcus spp. from GenBank compared with E. ortleppi* in Vietnam

NotationOriginHostLengthSpeciesGenBank numberAuthors
Eorvn1VietnamHuman438 bpE. ortleppi*This study
Eorvn2VietnamHuman438 bpE. ortleppi*This study
Eor1SudanCamel438 bpE. ortleppiJN637177.1Ahmed et al22
Eor2UnknownCattle438 bpE. ortleppiAB235846.1Nakao et al23
Eor3The NetherlandsCattle438 bpE. ortleppiDQ402037.1Lavikainen et al24
Eor4The NetherlandsCattle438 bpE. ortleppiAJ237636.1Bowles et al25
Eeq5NamibiaZebra420 bpE. equinusAJ508085.1Obwaller et al26
Eca6FinlandReindeer438 bpE. canadensisAF525297.1Lavikainen et al26
Eca7SudanCamel438 bpE. canadensisJN637176.1Ahmed et al22
Egr8IranCamel438 bpE. granulosusHM749618.1Rostami et al, unpublished data, 2010
Egr9IranCamel438 bpE. granulosusHM749617.1Rostami et al, unpublished data, 2010
Egr10IranHuman438 bpE. granulosusHM563037.1Fasihi et al, unpublished data, 2010
Egr11PolandHuman438 bpE. granulosusJX266822.1Dybicz et al27
Egr12PolandHuman438 bpE. granulosusJX266818.1Dybicz et al27

Notes:

Result after this study. Eorvn1 and Eorvn2 are Vietnamese Echinococcus spp. (collected from Patient 1 and Patient 2); Eor1 is Sudanese E. ortleppi (GenBank number: JN637177.1), Eor2 is from an unknown country (GenBank number: AB235846.1), Eor3 and Eor4 are E. ortleppi from the Netherlands (GenBank numbers: DQ402037.1 and AJ237636.1); Eeq5 is E. equinus from Namibia (GenBank number: AJ508085.1); Eca6 and Eca7 are E. canadensis from Finland and Sudan (GenBank numbers: AF525297.1 and JN637176.1), Egr8, Egr9, and Egr10 are Iranian E. granulosus specimens (GenBank numbers: HM749618.1, HM749617.1, and HM563037.1), and Egr11 and Egr12 are E. granulosus specimens from Poland (GenBank numbers: JX266822.1 and JX266818.1.

Abbreviations: bp, base pairs; NADH, reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide.

Table 2

Percentage of identity of nucleotides of NADH dehyrogenase 1 gene sequences of Vietnamese Echinococcus ortleppi and other Echinococcus spp. in GenBank

Eorvn1Eorvn2Eor1Eor2Eor3Eor4Eeq5Eca6Eca7Egr8Egr9Egr10Egr11Egr12
Eorvn199999999999694949494939393
Eorvn2999999100999693939393939393
Eor19999100100999693939393939393
Eor299100100100999693939393939393
Eor399100100100999693939393939393
Eor499999999999693939393939393
Eeq596969696969693979797979797
Eca6949393939393979797100999999
Eca794939393939397100100100999999
Egr894939393939397100100100999999
Egr99493939393939710010099999999
Egr10939393939393979999999999100
Egr119393939393939799999999100100
Egr129393939393939799999999100100

Notes: Eorvn1 and Eorvn2 are Vietnamese Echinococcus spp. (collected from Patient 1 and Patient 2); Eor1 is Sudanese E. ortleppi (GenBank number: JN637177.1), Eor2 is from an unknown country (GenBank number: AB235846.1), Eor3 and Eor4 are E. ortleppi from the Netherlands (GenBank numbers: DQ402037.1 and AJ237636.1); Eeq5 is E. equinus from Namibia (GenBank number: AJ508085.1); Eca6 and Eca7 are E. canadensis from Finland and Sudan (GenBank numbers: AF525297.1 and JN637176.1), Egr8, Egr9, and Egr10 are Iranian E. granulosus specimens (GenBank numbers: HM749618.1, HM749617.1, and HM563037.1), and Egr11 and Egr12 are E. granulosus specimens from Poland (GenBank numbers: JX266822.1 and JX266818.1.

Abbreviation: NADH, reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide.

Figure 4

Phylogenetic tree of Echinococcus ortleppi Vietnam and other strains derived from part of NADH dehydrogenase nucleotide sequence estimated by neighbor-joining (NJ) method using MEGA5.1.

Notes: Eorvn1, Eorvn2 = Vietnamese Echinococcus; Tspi1, Tspi2, Tspi3, Tspi4 = Chinese Trichinella spiralis (GenBank numbers: GU339148.1, GU339147.1, GU339146.1, and GU339145.1, respectively). Tca1, Tca2, Tca3, and Tca4 are Toxocara canis species (GenBank numbers: JF837170.1, JF837169.1, JN617989.1, and FJ418788.1, respectively). E. ortleppi are from Argentina (GenBank number: KC579444.1), Japan (GenBank numbers: AB235846.1 and AB979274.1), the Netherlands (GenBank numbers: AJ237636.1 and DQ402037.1), and Sudan (GenBank number: JN637177.1). E. granulosus samples are from France (GenBank number: JQ356724.1), China (GenBank number: KJ556995.1), Brazil (GenBank number: JF828350.1), and Estonia (GenBank number: FJ231470.1). Echinoccus canadensis is from Kazakhstan (GenBank number: AB208063.1), Finland (GenBank numbers: AB745463.1 and AF525297.1), Canada (GenBank numbers: HQ423292.1 and HQ423293.1), and Sudan (GenBank number: JN637176.1). Angiostrongylus cantonensis is from China (GenBank numbers: HQ540551.1, HQ540547.1, and HQ540546, respectively), Brazil (GenBank number: GU733321.1), and the USA (GenBank number: GU587760.1).

Abbreviation: NADH, reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide.

Figure 5

Phylogenetic tree of Echinococcus ortleppi Vietnam and other strains derived from part of cytochrome C oxidase subunit I nucleotide sequence, estimated by neighbor-joining (NJ) method using MEGA5.1.

Notes: E. ortleppi VN = Vietnamese Echinococcus; Tspi1, Tspi2, Tspi3, and Tspi4 = Chinese Trichinella spiralis (GenBank numbers: GU339148.1, GU339147.1, GU339146.1, and GU339145.1, respectively). Tca1, Tca2, Tca3, and Tca4 are Toxocara canis species (GenBank numbers: JF837170.1, JF837169.1, JN617989.1, and FJ418788.1, respectively). E. ortleppi samples are from Brazil (GenBank numbers: KT337323.1, KT382536.1, KT382535.1, and KT382539.1, respectively). Echinococus canadensis is from Egypt (GenBank number: AB921060.1), Finland (GenBank number: AF525475.1), Sudan (GenBank numbers: AB271911.1 and AB271910.1), and Brazil (GenBank number: KC787433.1). E. granulosus samples are from Iran (GenBank numbers: KU220240.1, KU359038.1, and KF612400.1), India (GenBank number: KC415063.1), and France (GenBank number: JQ356716.1). Angiostrongylus cantonensis samples are from China (GenBank numbers: HQ540551.1, HQ540547.1, and HQ540546, respectively), Brazil (GenBank number: GU733321.1), and the USA (GenBank number: GU587760.1).

Discussion

The two cases of echinococcosis in Vietnam were clearly diagnosed because larvae were detected in the cysts from both patients. X-ray diagnosis clearly showed one cyst of 6 × 7 cm in the first patient and four cysts with 2 × 3 cm, 3.5 × 4 cm, 5 × 6.5 cm, and 6 × 6.5 cm in the second patient. In Vietnam, in 2009, De and Khue reported a case, in which a 3 × 3.5 cm cyst in the lung was suspected as echinococcosis and which yielded a positive ELISA test with Echinococcus antigen.18 However, no larvae were collected from the cyst. In recent years, some suspected cases of water cysts in the liver were diagnosed as echinococcosis by ultrasonography, but again no larvae or hooks were collected in the fluid from the cysts. In 1967, Le-Van-Hoa and Vu-Ngoc-Tan19 reported on dogs that were infected with E. granulosus in southern Vietnam and that served as definitive hosts, which could transmit the disease to humans. Echinococcus ortleppi is a cattle strain (genotype G5) of E. granulosus occurring in Europe,4,28 which is infective to humans. Genotype G5 of E. ortleppi was detected for the first time in Italy in 2008 by Casulli et al,7 and cystic echinococcosis caused by its larval stage was found to be endemic in southern Brazil by Balbinotti et al in 2012.3 In 2011 and 2012, liver infections caused by E. ortleppi tapeworms were diagnosed in two humans in France, and in 2012, a nationwide slaughterhouse survey identified E. ortleppi infections in cattle.20 Echinococcosis in livestock caused by E. ortleppi was described in Kenya, Sudan, India, Italy, Argentina, and Brazil.13,14 More recent studies have reported the presence of this Echinococcus spp. in Ethiopia,30 Egypt,31 and France.7

Conclusion

In 2013, two cases of infection by E. ortleppi that caused cystic echinococcosis in the lungs were reported in Vietnam. This was the first time that this species was detected in humans in Vietnam.
  26 in total

1.  Infection of humans and animals with Echinococcus granulosus (G1 and G3 strains) and E. ortleppi in Southern Brazil.

Authors:  Mario L de la Rue; Keishi Takano; Joaquim F Brochado; Carmem V Costa; Antonio G Soares; Kimiaki Yamano; Kinpei Yagi; Yoshinobu Katoh; Kenichi Takahashi
Journal:  Vet Parasitol       Date:  2010-11-19       Impact factor: 2.738

2.  [Concerning the pesence of cestodes, Echinococcus granulosus (Batsch, 1786), in a wild dog, Cyon primaerus (Hodgs) in South Vietnam].

Authors: 
Journal:  Bull Soc Pathol Exot Filiales       Date:  1967 Jan-Feb

3.  Molecular characterization of Echinococcus isolates of cervid origin from Finland and Sweden.

Authors:  A Lavikainen; M J Lehtinen; S Laaksonen; E Agren; A Oksanen; S Meri
Journal:  Parasitology       Date:  2006-07-11       Impact factor: 3.234

4.  Molecular diagnosis of cystic echinococcosis in humans from central Poland.

Authors:  Monika Dybicz; Anna Gierczak; Julia Dąbrowska; Łukasz Rdzanek; Bogdan Michałowicz
Journal:  Parasitol Int       Date:  2013-03-25       Impact factor: 2.230

5.  NADH dehydrogenase 1 gene sequences compared for species and strains of the genus Echinococcus.

Authors:  J Bowles; D P McManus
Journal:  Int J Parasitol       Date:  1993-11       Impact factor: 3.981

6.  Echinococcus ortleppi and E. granulosus G1, G2 and G3 genotypes in Italian bovines.

Authors:  Adriano Casulli; Maria Teresa Manfredi; Giuseppe La Rosa; Anna Rita Di Cerbo; Claudio Genchi; Edoardo Pozio
Journal:  Vet Parasitol       Date:  2008-06-02       Impact factor: 2.738

Review 7.  Echinococcosis in wild carnivorous species: epidemiology, genotypic diversity, and implications for veterinary public health.

Authors:  David Carmena; Guillermo A Cardona
Journal:  Vet Parasitol       Date:  2014-03-15       Impact factor: 2.738

8.  Cystic echinococcosis in a single tertiary care center in Rome, Italy.

Authors:  Linda Petrone; Gilda Cuzzi; Lidia Colace; Giuseppe Maria Ettorre; Elisa Busi-Rizzi; Vincenzo Schininà; Leopoldo Pucillo; Claudio Angeletti; Stefania Pane; Antonino Di Caro; Eugenio Bordi; Enrico Girardi; Edoardo Pozio; Angela Corpolongo; Antonella Teggi; Enrico Brunetti; Delia Goletti
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2013-09-14       Impact factor: 3.411

9.  Echinococcus ortleppi infections in humans and cattle, France.

Authors:  Frédéric Grenouillet; Gérald Umhang; Francine Arbez-Gindre; Georges Mantion; Eric Delabrousse; Laurence Millon; Franck Boué
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 6.883

10.  Molecular characterization of Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato from farm animals in Egypt.

Authors:  Said Amer; Ibrahim B Helal; Evelyne Kamau; Yaoyu Feng; Lihua Xiao
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-03-11       Impact factor: 3.240

View more
  3 in total

1.  First description of Echinococcus ortleppi infection in China.

Authors:  Yunliang Shi; Xiaoling Wan; Ziyue Wang; Jun Li; Zhihua Jiang; Yichao Yang
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2019-08-09       Impact factor: 3.876

2.  Echinococcus contamination ratio and its related risk factors in Moghan plain, northwest of Iran.

Authors:  Hafez Mirzanejad-Asl
Journal:  Trop Parasitol       Date:  2019-09-18

3.  Species and genotypes belonging to Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato complex causing human cystic echinococcosis in Europe (2000-2021): a systematic review.

Authors:  Federica Santolamazza; Azzurra Santoro; Adriano Casulli; Alessandro Massolo; Urmas Saarma; Gérald Umhang
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 3.876

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.