| Literature DB >> 30453907 |
Sergey Yegorov1,2, Ronald M Galiwango3, Sara V Good4,5, Juliet Mpendo6, Egbert Tannich7, Andrea K Boggild8,9, Noah Kiwanuka6,10, Bernard S Bagaya6,11, Rupert Kaul3,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Schistosoma mansoni infection has been associated with increased risk of HIV transmission in African women. This association might be causal or mediated through shared socio-behavioural factors and associated co-infections. We tested the latter hypothesis in a cross-sectional pilot study in a cohort of women from a S. mansoni endemic region of Uganda. To validate the immunological effects of S. mansoni in this cohort, we additionally assessed known schistosomiasis biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: HIV risk factors; HIV susceptibility; Injectable hormonal contraceptives; Intestinal schistosomiasis; Schistosoma mansoni; Sexually transmitted infections
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30453907 PMCID: PMC6245923 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-018-3481-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Distribution of schistosomiasis and the study site location in Uganda. a. Prevalence and distribution of S. mansoni in Uganda; b. Prevalence and distribution of S. haematobium in Uganda; c. Map of Wakiso district and location of the study site (Entebbe). Note that Entebbe is endemic for S. mansoni but not S. haematobium. The maps show the location of schistosomiasis surveys and the reported prevalence of schistosomiasis across Uganda. Scale is given for the maps of Uganda. Map source: The Global Atlas of Helminth Infection [21]
Associations of participant characteristics with schistosome infection
| Participant characteristic | Entire cohort ( | OR for association with schistosomiasis (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median age (IQR) | 27.5 (23.8–32.0) | 25.0 (22.5–29.5) | 30.0 (25.0–34.0) | 0.910 (0.830–0.999) | 0.047 |
| Married, % | 60.7 (34/56) | 50.0 (16/32) | 79.2 (19/24) | 0.263 (0.079–0.878) | 0.030 |
| Sexual behaviour | |||||
| Hormonal contraceptive use, % | 30.4 (17/56) | 12.5 (4/32) | 54.2 (13/24) | 0.121 (0.032–0.452) | 0.002 |
| DMPAa, % | 19.6 (11/56) | 9.4 (3/32) | 33.3 (8/24) | ||
| NetEna, % | 8.9 (5/56) | 3.1 (1/32) | 16.7 (4/24) | ||
| Oral pill, % | 1.8 (1/56) | 0 (0/32) | 4.2 (1/24) | ||
| Sex in last 3 days | |||||
| PSA+, % | 41.8 (23/55) | 31.3 (10/32) | 56.5 (13/23) | 0.350 (0.115–1.064) | 0.064b |
| Self-reported, % | 29.6 (16/54) | 26.7 (8/30) | 33.3 (8/24) | 0.727 (0.225–2.349) | 0.595 |
| Reported condom use in last sex, % | 19.2 (10/52) | 20.0 (6/30) | 18.2 (4/22) | 1.125 (0.276–4.585) | 1.00 |
| Presence of eosinophiliaa, % | 14.3 (8/56) | 18.8 (6/32) | 8.3 (2/24) | 2.538 (0.465–13.868) | 0.282 |
| HSV-2 seropositive, % | 58.6 (34/58) | 63.6 (21/33) | 52.0 (13/25) | 1.615 (0.561–4.652) | 0.374 |
| Genital conditions | |||||
| Presence of tested STI, % | 12.1 (7/58) | 15.2 (5/33) | 8.0 (2/25) | 2.054 (0.364–11.585) | 0.408 |
| | 1.7 (1/58) | 0.0 (0/33) | 4.0 (1/25) | ||
| | 8.6 (5/58) |
| 0.0 (0/25) | ||
| | 1.7 (1/58) | 0.0 (0/33) | 4.0 (1/25) | ||
| Self-reporting genital condition in past month, % | 30.9 (17/55) | 38.7 (12/31) | 20.8 (5/24) | 2.4 (0.707–8.144) | 0.160 |
| Presence of bacterial vaginosis, % | 30.6 (11/36) | 20.0 (4/20) | 43.8 (7/16) | 0.321 (0.074–1.405) | 0.159 |
ag antigen, OR odds ratio, DMPA depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate, NET-EN norethisterone enanthate, PSA prostate-specific antigen, STI sexually transmitted infection; aeosinophilia was defined as > 450 eosinophils per ul of blood; b trend. Data were assessed using univariate binomial logistic regression with the Schistosoma spp. ag-free (CCA-negative) group as the reference category. When OR is above 1, there is a positive association of given factor with schistosomiasis; OR value above 1 represents inverse relationship of given factor with schistosomiasis. OR for age is a per year OR
Associations of age, marital status, hormonal contraceptive use and recent sex with schistosome infection as assessed by multivariable logistic regression
| Participant characteristic | Entire cohort ( | OR for association with schistosomiasis (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median age (IQR) | 27.5 (23.8–32.0) | 25.0 (22.5–29.5) | 30.0 (25.0–34.0) | 0.934 (0.838–1.041) | 0.216 |
| Married, % | 60.7 (34/56) | 50.0 (16/32) | 79.2 (19/24) | 0.590 (0.138–2.527) | 0.477 |
| Sexual behaviour | |||||
| Hormonal contraceptive use, % | 30.4 (17/56) | 12.5 (4/32) | 54.2 (13/24) | 0.151 (0.037–0.611) | 0.008 |
| DMPA*, % | 19.6 (11/56) | 9.4 (3/32) | 33.3 (8/24) | ||
| NetEn*, % | 8.9 (5/56) | 3.1 (1/32) | 16.7 (4/24) | ||
| Oral pill, % | 1.8 (1/56) | 0 (0/32) | 4.2 (1/24) | ||
| Sex in last 3 days | |||||
| PSA+, % | 41.8 (23/55) | 31.3 (10/32) | 56.5 (13/23) | 0.480 (0.130–1.773) | 0.271 |
ag antigen, OR odds ratio, DMPA depot-medroxyprogesterone acetate, NET-EN norethisterone enanthate, PSA prostate-specific antigen. Data were assessed using multivariable binomial logistic regression with factors that were found to have significant associations in univariate analysis and the Schistosoma spp. ag-free (CCA-negative) group as the reference category. When OR is above 1, there is a positive association of given factor with schistosomiasis; OR value above 1 represents inverse relationship of given factor with schistosomiasis. OR for age is a per year OR
Fig. 2Systemic immunological differences observed between women with (schisto+) and without schistosomiasis (schisto-). a. Plasma IL-10 levels; b. Plasma TNF levels; c and d. Correlations between eosinophil counts and IL-10 (c) and TNF (d). e. Eosinophil counts, where red dotted line depicts the conventional threshold of eosinophilia (450 cells per μl of whole blood). Multiplex ELISA assays were conducted by a technologist blinded to schistosomiasis status on plasma samples available for 39 women (15 positive and 24 negative for schistosomiasis). Cytokine levels and eosinophil counts were compared by Mann-Whitney test (p = 0.05); plots depict medians and interquartile ranges. Correlations were assessed on LOG-transformed values by Spearman test (p = 0.05)