| Literature DB >> 30220883 |
Sheba Meymandi1, Salvador Hernandez1, Sandy Park1, Daniel R Sanchez1, Colin Forsyth1.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Chagas disease (CD) is endemic to much of Latin America, but also present in the United States (U.S.). Following a lengthy asymptomatic period, CD produces serious cardiac or gastrointestinal complications in 30-40% of people. Less than 1% of the estimated six million cases in the Americas, including 326,000-347,000 in the U.S., are diagnosed. Infected persons are typically unaware and the bulk of clinicians are unfamiliar with current treatment guidelines. This review provides U.S. and other clinicians with the latest knowledge of CD treatment. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Benznidazole; Chagas disease; Neglected tropical diseases; Nifurtimox; Trypanosoma cruzi
Year: 2018 PMID: 30220883 PMCID: PMC6132494 DOI: 10.1007/s40506-018-0170-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Treat Options Infect Dis ISSN: 1523-3820
Fig. 1Diagnostic process of the center of excellence for Chagas disease at olive view-UCLA medical center. Patients eligible for treatment are first tested at a commercial laboratory. If that result is positive, patients receive further testing (a Wiener ELISA and TESA blot) at the CDC.
Recommendations for antiparasitic treatment of T. cruzi infection
| Clinical group | Treatment recommendation [ | Recommendation, evidence level [ |
|---|---|---|
| Infants with congenital infection | Treat | I, B |
| Any acute phase | Treat | I, B |
| Reactivation in immunocompromised | Treat | I, C |
| Children in chronic indeterminate phase | Treat | I, A |
| Adolescents in chronic indeterminate phase | Treat | IIa, B |
| Seropositive organ donors | Treat | I, C |
| Recipients of organs from seropositive donors | Probable treat | IIa, C |
| Laboratory accidents | Treat | IIa, C |
| Women of childbearing age | Treat | NA |
| Chronic indeterminate phase, adults 19–50 years old without cardiomyopathy (Kuschnir 0) | Probable treat | IIa, B |
| Chronic phase, cardiomyopathy without advanced heart disease (Kuschnir I, II) | Probable treat | IIb, C |
| Chronic phase with advanced cardiomyopathy (Kuschnir III) | Probable non treat | III, C |
| Chronic indeterminate phase, adults older than 50 without advanced cardiomyopathy (Kuschnir 0, I, II) | Possible treat; case-by-case evaluation | IIb, C [ |
| Early digestive involvement without advanced cardiomyopathy (Kuschnir 0, I, II) | Probable treat | IIa, C |
| Pregnant women | Definite non-treat | III, C |
Definitions of classes from the Brazilian consensus: I—conclusive evidence supporting treatment, II—conflicting evidence or views, IIa—evidence and consensus favors treatment, IIb—treatment considered optional due to lack of definitive supporting evidence and conflicting views, III—conclusive evidence or consensus that treatment is not effective. Definitions of evidence levels: A—data from multiple randomized trials or meta-analyses of randomized trials; B—data from only one randomized trial or several non-randomized observational studies; C—supported by consensus of expert opinion
Fig. 2Clinical management of patients at the center of excellence for Chagas disease at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center. Patients are evaluated for chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy and undergo requisite labs (renal and hepatic function and complete blood count) to determine eligibility for etiological treatment. The right side of the figure illustrates management of side effects, which depends on their severity.
The Kuschnir classification for chronic Chagas disease cardiomyopathy [48]
| Kuschnir group | Serologic testing for | Abnormal ECG | Cardiac enlargement by chest X-ray | Clinical signs of heart failure |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | + | – | – | – |
| I | + | + | – | – |
| II | + | + | + | – |
| III | + | + | + | + |
Recommended surveillance in patients with confirmed T. cruzi infection
| Study | Comments | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Electrocardiogram | CD patients with a normal ECG have a good prognosis. The presence of conduction abnormalities may be an early marker of cardiac damage [ | Baseline and annually |
| Echocardiogram | Left ventricular systolic dysfunction triggered by fibrosis is a common feature of CCM. Wall motion abnormalities and apical aneurysms are frequent features of CCM. | Baseline and annually |
| 24-h Holter | To evaluate the presence of arrhythmias and autonomic dysfunction, which elevate the risk of sudden death. | Baseline |
| Chest X-ray | To assess cardiomegaly. | Baseline |