肠道蠕虫是非洲HIV血清阳性成人非伤寒沙门氏菌菌血症的危险因素吗?病例对照研究

J. J. Dowling, C. Whitty, M. Chaponda, C. Munthali, E. Zijlstra, C. Gilks, S. Squire, M. Gordon
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引用次数: 11

摘要

在非洲,侵袭性非伤寒沙门氏菌(NTS)感染是HIV血清阳性成人中一种常见但危及生命的并发症。人类感染穿透肠道的肠道蠕虫的高流行率可以解释为什么NTS菌血症在非洲比在工业化国家更为重要。如果寄生虫感染是NTS的一个主要风险因素,它将提供一个与当地相关的公共卫生目标。将57例hiv阳性NTS菌血症患者(病例)与162例年龄、性别、城市居住和社会经济因素与病例相似的hiv阳性对照进行肠道寄生虫携带比较。总体而言,寄生虫感染率为29%,病例(18%)低于对照组(33%),粗比值比为0.40[95%可信区间(CI)为0.21-0.9],校正比值比(aOR)为0.79 (CI=0.4-1.8)。5例(9%)病例和12例(7%)对照感染了穿透肠道的线虫(类蚓蛔虫和/或粪类圆线虫)。经年龄、性别、城市居住和研究阶段校正后,这些穿透性蠕虫感染的aOR为1.40 (CI=0.4-4.5)。目前的结果不排除蠕虫在侵袭性NTS感染中发挥作用的可能性,但与蠕虫在该人群中成为公共卫生目标的充分危险因素不一致。在非洲,驱虫药不太可能对预防被诊断为艾滋病毒阳性患者的NTS菌血症产生重大影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are intestinal helminths a risk factor for non-typhoidal Salmonella bacteraemia in adults in Africa who are seropositive for HIV? A case-control study
Abstract In Africa, invasive, non-typhoidal Salmonella (NTS) infections are a common but life-threatening complication in adults who are seropositive for HIV. The high prevalence of human infection with intestinal helminths which penetrate the gut could explain the greater importance of NTS bacteraemia in Africa compared with that in industrialized countries. If helminth infection is a major risk factor for NTS it would provide a locally relevant, public-health target. Intestinal helminth carriage in 57 HIV-positive patients with NTS bacteraemia (the cases) was compared with that in 162 HIV-positive controls who were similar to the cases in terms of age, sex, urban dwelling and socio-economic factors. The prevalence of helminth infection, 29% overall, was lower among the cases (18%) than among the controls (33%), giving a crude odds ratio of 0.40 [with a 95% confidence interval (CI) of 0.21-0.9] and an adjusted odds ratio (aOR) of 0.79 (CI=0.4-1.8). Five (9%) of the cases and 12 (7%) of the controls were infected with nematodes which penetrate the gut (Ascaris lumbricoides and/or Strongyloides stercoralis). The aOR for infection with these penetrating worms, corrected for age, sex, urban dwelling and phase of study, was 1.40 (CI=0.4-4.5). The present results do not exclude the possibility that helminths play a role in invasive NTS infections, but are not consistent with helminths being a sufficient risk factor in this population to be a public-health target. Anthelmintics are unlikely to have a major impact on preventing NTS bacteraemia in patients diagnosed HIV-positive in Africa.
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