| Literature DB >> 31622369 |
Malini Pires1, Barry Wright1, Paul M Kaye2,3, Virgínia da Conceição4, Rachel C Churchill2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leishmaniasis is a neglected tropical parasitic disease endemic in South Asia, East Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. It is associated with low socioeconomic status (SES) and responsible for considerable mortality and morbidity. Reports suggest that patients with leishmaniasis may have a higher risk of mental illness (MI), psychosocial morbidity (PM) and reduced quality of life (QoL), but this is not well characterised. The aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review to assess the reported impact of leishmaniasis on mental health and psychosocial wellbeing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31622369 PMCID: PMC6797112 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
General characteristics of the included studies.
| Author | Study Design | Sample (population) | Leishmaniasis Subtype | Mental health consequence measured (outcome) | Sample size | Age in years (mean±SD or range (if mean n/a) | Gender ratio (Female %) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alemayehu et al. 2017 | Cross-sectional | HIV infected patients receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART)- with and without VL coinfection at four different sites in Northwest Ethiopia | HIV-VL | QoL with | 590 | 34.5 (± 7.4)- HIV-VL patients; 36.4 (±8.8)- HIV-only patients | 3.2%- HIV-VL patients; 61.7%- HIV-only patients |
| Alemayehu et al. 2018 | Prospective cohort | Same as above (6-month follow-up) | HIV-VL | QoL with WHOQoL-HIV instrument | 581 | 34.5 (±7.7)- HIV-VL patients; 36.4 (±8.9)- HIV-only patients | 5.3%- HIV-VL patients; 61.7%- HIV-only patients |
| Bennis et al. 2018 | Systematic Review | Patients or their relatives experiencing a skin condition linked to LCL in any country. | CL | PM, QoL and MI. No | n/a | ||
| Chahed et al. 2016 | Cross-sectional | CL patients with scars selected randomly in primary health centres | CL | QoL, PM and MI with IPQ-R, PSLI and WHOQOL-26 | 41 | 12–53 | 100% |
| de Castro Toledo et al. | Cross-sectional | Patients with confirmed diagnosis of CL with a minimum of 4 years of school education | CL | QoL with | 20 | 45.6 | 15% |
| Govil et al. | Cross-sectional | People living in villages where VL is endemic. | VL | PM with KAP structured questionnaire | 353 | 41.7 (±17.1) | 44.5% |
| Handjani and Kalafi 2013 | Cross-sectional | Family members | CL | QoL with FDLQI | 5 | 42 | 27% |
| Honório et al. 2016 | Cross-sectional | CL patients at University Hospital of Brasilia | CL | QoL, PM, and MI with WHOQOL-BREF | 44 | 51.8 (±11.6) | 54.5% |
| Layegh et al. 2017 | Cross-sectional | Children with CL with in dermatology clinics. | CL | QoL and MI with CDLQI, CDI and STAIC | 42 | 69% | |
| Pal et al. | Case-control | Outpatient and inpatient population. | PKDL | QoL with DLQI | 188 | 27.4 –patients; 29.5—healthy controls | 45.6%- patients; 44.8%- controls |
| Simsek et al. 2008 | Cross-sectional | Women selected randomly from cluster sampling from households. | CL | MI with SCID-I | 270 | 33.3+9.4 | 100% |
| Turan et al. | Case-control | Children and adolescents with CL and healthy controls, and their respective mothers. | CL | MI and QoL with CDI PedQL-C, PedQL-P, STAIC | 54 | 12.0 (±3.2) | 46.3% |
| Vares et al. | Cross-sectional | patients >16 years-old with CL | CL | QoL and psychosocial morbidity with DLQI | 124 | 36.9 (±14.9) | 62.9% |
| Yanik et al. | Case-control | Patients with Active CL and healthy controls from a leishmaniasis treatment centre. | CL | QoL, MI and PM with HAD, BIS and DQL | 99 | 18.8 (±5.9) | 50.5% |
Summary of data obtained from data extraction process.
Not applicable *
Not mentioned **
Outcomes of included studies.
| Leishmaniasis Subtype | Author | Measure | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visceral Leishmaniasis | Alemayehu et al., 2017 | WHOQOL-BREF | • HIV-VL patients had lower mean scores in all domains of questionnaire compared to HIV alone patients; |
| Alemayehu et al., 2018 | WHOQOL-BREF | • Both groups improved in all the QoL domains was observed 6 months post-treatment with both antiretroviral treatment (ART) and anti-leishmanial drugs; | |
| Govil et al., 2018 | KAP structured questionnaire | • 4.7% agreed that incidence of VL in the family should not be disclosed; | |
| Cutaneous Leishmaniasis | Bennis et al., 2018 | n/a | • Quantitative and qualitative research indicated that localised CL is a source of psychological suffering, stigmatization, and lower QoL. |
| Chahed et al., 2016 | IPQ-R, WHOQOL-26, PSLI | • Emotional representations in CL correlated with loss of self-esteem, feelings of inferiority (r = 0.77, p<0.05); | |
| de Castro Toledo et al., 2013 | DLQI | • In 70% of patients CL had a moderate to large effect on QoL in the “work and school” domain, followed by the “symptoms and feelings” domain. | |
| Handjani and Kalafi 2013 | FDLQI | • No statistically significant difference in QoL of families of vitiligo, psoriasis, pemphigus and leishmaniasis patients. | |
| Honório et al., 2016 | WHOQOL-BREF | • 90.9% had negative feelings (blue mood, anxiety, despair, depression); | |
| Layegh et al., 2017 | CDLQI, CDI, STAIC | • Prevalence of low QoL, state anxiety, and trait anxiety was 57.1%, 76.9%, and 15.8% respectively; | |
| Simsek et al. 2008 | SCID-I | • 8 (53.3%) of the women who had CL had a mental health disorder; | |
| Turan et al. 2015 | CDI PedQL-C, PedQL-P, STAIC | • Scores for depression were higher in patients vs controls and QoL was lower in patients and their mothers; | |
| Vares et al. 2013 | DLQI | • Appearance and type of lesion significantly affected QoL (p<0.05); | |
| Yanik et al. 2004 | HAD, BIS and DQL | • Lesions on the face and hands, disease active for over a year, permanent scars and social stigmatisation led to anxiety and depression (p<0.01); | |
| Post Kala-azar Dermal Leishmaniasis | Pal et al. 2008 | DLQI, SF-36 | • QoL significantly lower in patients <20 years (p = 0.03) and in those with more severe lesions (p = 0.001). |
Fig 1Conceptual Framework.
Theoretical model linking leishmaniasis to decreased quality of life, mental illness and psychosocial morbidity. Continuous blue arrows show links that were confirmed in the included studies, dotted blue arrows show links that have been established in the literature but were not mentioned in our included studies, and red arrows show theoretical links that were hypothesized for this systematic review but not confirmed in the literature.