Kala-azar: azar: Can Visceral Leishmaniasis Ever Be Controlled?

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Kala-azar: azar: Can Visceral Leishmaniasis Ever Be Controlled? R. Killick-Kendrick Kendrick Honorary Research Investigator (Division of Biology, Imperial College, London, UK) Global Health Histories Series Tropical Diseases: Lessons from History October 21, 2009. WHO, Geneva

The Burden of the Leishmaniases All forms: Global prevalence: ~12 million cases Annual incidence: 1.5-2.0 million Countries affected : 88 People at risk : 350 million

Visceral Leishmaniasis alone Estimated Disability Adjusted Life Years: 2 million Estimated new symptomatic cases annually: 500,000 (90% in East Africa, Brazil and the Indian subcontinent)

Distribution of the Visceral Leishmaniases

East Africa

Patient with visceral leishmaniasis in a Médecins sans Frontières res clinic in East Africa. T. Burki (2009). Lancet, 374: 371-372.

Photo: Ed Rowton, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

Photo: R. Killick-Kendrick Kendrick Acacia seyal woodland in Eastern Sudan, the habitat of the Sudanese vector of visceral leishmaniasis (Phlebotomus orientalis)

Should an extensive outbreak of kala-azar azar occur in any village, the whole village should be burnt and a new village built on a fresh site, after the patients and contacts have been isolated. Thomson, D.S.B. (1910). Kala-azar azar Commission to investigate the prevalence and cause of the disease in Eastern Sudan; (1) General report.

No control programme has so far been implemented in Sudan. Important questions concerning epidemiology, entomology and animal and/or human reservoir must first be answered. (Zijlstra and El Hassan, 2001)

In 1999 2001, Médecins M sans Frontières res distributed 35,700 insecticide-impregnated impregnated bednets in 155 villages in a highly active VL focus in Eastern Sudan. Seventeen to twenty months later, clinical cases had fallen by 59% It was estimated that the intervention prevented 1,060 new cases --- and the mean protection effect was 27%. (Ritmeijer et al. 2007)

In March, 2009, aid agencies were expelled from northern Sudan. Médecins sans Frontières res was obliged to cancel plans to control visceral leishmaniasis in the east of the country.

Brazil

Visceral leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania infantum with a canine reservoir (Brazil). (L = liver; S= spleen) L S Photo: W. Peters

Distribution of visceral leishmaniasis in Brazil, 1984 Deane & Grimaldi, 1985

Poor rural housing in north east Brazil

Photo: P.D. Ready An urban focus of visceral leishmaniasis in north-east Brazil

Last stages of canine leishmaniasis with severe emaciation and depilation Photo: R. Killick-Kendrick Kendrick

Control by culling seropositive dogs (1) Brazil Control Programme 1984-1996 1996 Sera of 6.5 million dogs tested 153,819 seropositive dogs destroyed One million houses sprayed with insecticide Cost >US$ 96 million

Serologically positive dogs culled to control visceral leishmaniasis Photo: R. Killick-Kendrick Kendrick

Culling serologically positive dogs as a means of control: reasons for failure Resentment by dog owners, Inability of the tests to reveal all dogs that are infectious to sand flies, Delay between testing and culling, And, in some places, the possible presence of other reservoir hosts. (Oliveira et al., 2008).

Uninfected Baneth, G. et al., (2008) Trends in Parasitology, 24: 324-330 Clinical signs reveal only a small proportion of dogs with CanL: serology and/or PCR reveal many more without clinical signs (but able to infect sand flies).

Field trial to reduce risk of infection with VL in São Paulo State, 2002-2005 2005 All seropositive dogs in a chosen cohort were killed 22,260 seronegative dogs were fitted with deltamethrin-impregnated impregnated collars, changed annually From 2002 to 2005, the prevalence of canine infections fell from 12.5% to 3.9% During the same period, the incidence of human cases fell from 34.1/100,000 to 5.4/ 100,000 (Camargo-Neves et al., 2004, 2009)

Changes in the prevalence of CanL and the incidence of human VL in two study sites in Brazil after collaring all seronegative dogs in April 2002 From: Camargo-Neves, V.L.F., et al. (2004). Boletim Epidemiógica Paulista, No12, 7-14.

India

Photo: R. Killick-Kendrick Kendrick The habitat of P. argentipes in a focus of anthroponotic visceral leishmaniasis in Bihar State, India.

L S Anthroponotic visceral leishmaniasis; Bihar State, India; the spleen (S) and the liver (L) are greatly enlarged. WHO

Photo: R. Killick-Kendrick Kendrick Post kala-azar azar dermal leishmaniasis of the thigh showing depigmentation and a skin rash; the skin is heavily infected: these patients are reservoirs of infection. Bihar State, India.

Treatment of kala-azar azar in India (1) Urea stibamine introduced in 1922 Many thousands of cases successfully treated Survival much improved But little measurable effect on prevalence of infection (H.E. Shortt, 1932)

Treatment of kala-azar azar in India (2) In hyperendemic areas of India, no more than 9% of those affected with VL seek medical advice for diagnosis and/or treatment. Owing to lack of resources and health education, compliance with treatment is extremely low. (P. Desjeux 2001)

Treatment of kala-azar azar in India (3) Pentostam: resistance widespread Ambisome: : intravenous infusion, average cost for two injections: US$ 250: one injection treatment, under investigation, average cost: US$ 125 Paramomycin: : intramuscular injections for 21 days, average cost of drug: US$ 15-20

Treatment of kala-azar azar in India (4) Miltefosine: : oral twice daily for 28 days; contraindicated in pregnancy; long half life and therefore fears for resistance of parasite; not yet known if it cures PKDL Guidelines on use of Miltefosine, Govt. of India

Treatment of kala-azar azar in India (5) Mean household expenditure for one case of VL in Bihar is estimated at US$ 59.8. estimated at US$ 59.8. [Vinod B. Annigeri (unpublished) In: Rijal et al.(2005).trstmh, 100: 838-841.] In Bihar State, 75% of VL patients have a daily income of <US$ 1. (Desjeux, P. 2001)

Limitations in house spraying with DDT (1) Environmental damage DDT is cheap, but its harmful and long- lasting environmental effects require proper evaluation; it may not in the end be the insecticide of choice for long-term control. (Thakur, 2000)

Limitations in house spraying with DDT (2) Operational deficiencies --- despite the supposed 5 DDT spray- rounds between 1992 and 1994, 57% of houses had not, in fact, been sprayed. (Thakur, 2000)

Limitations in house spraying with DDT (3) Insecticide Resistance In Bihar, Phlebotomus argentipes developed resistance to DDT during house spraying in the epidemic in the 1970s (Singh et al., 2001)

Limitations in house spraying with DDT (4) Danger of post-spraying spraying epidemics. When house spraying is abandoned prematurely, the population of sand flies recovers quickly and an epidemic is highly probable. This happened in India in the 1970s after the campaign to eradicate malaria worldwide was abandoned 1969 (Sen Gupta, 1975, Makhopadhyay et al., 1987).

Can Visceral Leishmaniasis Ever Be Controlled? YES

Distribution of visceral leishmaniasis in China in 1958 before the control campaign Xu Zhi-biao (1988)

All dogs were destroyed All houses sprayed with either DDT or Gammexane annually for 30 years Annual active case detection and treatment

Distribution of visceral leishmaniasis in China in 1988 after the control campaign Xu Zhi-biao (1988)

Lessons (1) ESSENTIALS Peace Political Commitment Long-term Funding Feasible Strategies Public Education

Lessons (2) Structure of the Focus Distribution and Incidence Population dynamics and behaviour of vector(s) Identification and behaviour of animal reservoir(s) (if appropriate)

Lessons (3) Action against the source of infection Destroy stray dogs: protect all other dogs from sand fly bites with insecticide- impregnated collars or by dipping in insecticide Active case detection and treatment including PKDL patients (How?) Asymptomatic cases?

Lessons (4) Action against the vector Efficient and supervised house spraying With more than one insecticide Regular tests for insecticide resistance Insecticide-impregnated impregnated bed-nets

American Mosquito Control Association Del: Hilda Munoz Thank you