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Epidemiology of Imported Leishmaniasis in Italy: Implications for a European Endemic Country

In the past decade, the number of imported leishmaniasis cases has increased in countries of Western Europe. The trend is associated with increasing travels, ecotourism activity, military operations and immigration. While in endemic countries leishmaniasis is usually well diagnosed, accurate patient...

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Autores principales: Di Muccio, Trentina, Scalone, Aldo, Bruno, Antonella, Marangi, Massimo, Grande, Romualdo, Armignacco, Orlando, Gradoni, Luigi, Gramiccia, Marina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4482607/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26114938
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129418
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author Di Muccio, Trentina
Scalone, Aldo
Bruno, Antonella
Marangi, Massimo
Grande, Romualdo
Armignacco, Orlando
Gradoni, Luigi
Gramiccia, Marina
author_facet Di Muccio, Trentina
Scalone, Aldo
Bruno, Antonella
Marangi, Massimo
Grande, Romualdo
Armignacco, Orlando
Gradoni, Luigi
Gramiccia, Marina
author_sort Di Muccio, Trentina
collection PubMed
description In the past decade, the number of imported leishmaniasis cases has increased in countries of Western Europe. The trend is associated with increasing travels, ecotourism activity, military operations and immigration. While in endemic countries leishmaniasis is usually well diagnosed, accurate patient history and parasite identification are necessary to distinguish between autochthonous and imported cases. This is particularly important, as new Leishmania species/genotypes may be introduced and transmitted by local phlebotomine vectors without appropriate surveillance, with unpredictable consequences. We report on the surveillance of imported leishmaniasis performed by the Leishmania Identification Reference Centre of Rome from 1986 through 2012, involving health care centres from 16/20 Italian regions. Suspected imported cases were analyzed and conclusions were based on clinical, epidemiological and diagnostic findings. Over the years, different parasite identification methods were employed, including MultiLocus Enzyme Electrophoresis and molecular techniques combining disease diagnosis (SSU rDNA nested-PCR) and Leishmania typing (nuclear repetitive sequence and ITS-1 PCR-RFLPs). A total of 105 imported cases were recorded (annual range: 0-20) of which 36 were visceral (VL) (16 HIV-coinfections) and 69 cutaneous (CL) cases; 85 cases (52 CL) were from the Old World and 20 (17 CL) from the New World. Eight Leishmania species were identified, of which 7 were exotic to Italy. VL importation until 1995 was associated with the spread of Mediterranean Leishmania-HIV co-infections in early 1990s. Following the introduction of HAART treatment, such cases became occasional in Italians but relatively frequent among immigrants. In contrast, a steady increase of CL cases was observed from different areas of the Old and New Worlds, that in recent years included mainly immigrants ‘visiting friends and relatives’ and Italian tourists. This positive trend likely depends on better diagnosis and reporting; however, we suspect that many CL cases remained unrecognized. Given the relatively low incidence of leishmaniasis importation, the risk of introduction of exotic parasites appears limited, although the detection of anthroponotic species requires attention.
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spelling pubmed-44826072015-06-29 Epidemiology of Imported Leishmaniasis in Italy: Implications for a European Endemic Country Di Muccio, Trentina Scalone, Aldo Bruno, Antonella Marangi, Massimo Grande, Romualdo Armignacco, Orlando Gradoni, Luigi Gramiccia, Marina PLoS One Research Article In the past decade, the number of imported leishmaniasis cases has increased in countries of Western Europe. The trend is associated with increasing travels, ecotourism activity, military operations and immigration. While in endemic countries leishmaniasis is usually well diagnosed, accurate patient history and parasite identification are necessary to distinguish between autochthonous and imported cases. This is particularly important, as new Leishmania species/genotypes may be introduced and transmitted by local phlebotomine vectors without appropriate surveillance, with unpredictable consequences. We report on the surveillance of imported leishmaniasis performed by the Leishmania Identification Reference Centre of Rome from 1986 through 2012, involving health care centres from 16/20 Italian regions. Suspected imported cases were analyzed and conclusions were based on clinical, epidemiological and diagnostic findings. Over the years, different parasite identification methods were employed, including MultiLocus Enzyme Electrophoresis and molecular techniques combining disease diagnosis (SSU rDNA nested-PCR) and Leishmania typing (nuclear repetitive sequence and ITS-1 PCR-RFLPs). A total of 105 imported cases were recorded (annual range: 0-20) of which 36 were visceral (VL) (16 HIV-coinfections) and 69 cutaneous (CL) cases; 85 cases (52 CL) were from the Old World and 20 (17 CL) from the New World. Eight Leishmania species were identified, of which 7 were exotic to Italy. VL importation until 1995 was associated with the spread of Mediterranean Leishmania-HIV co-infections in early 1990s. Following the introduction of HAART treatment, such cases became occasional in Italians but relatively frequent among immigrants. In contrast, a steady increase of CL cases was observed from different areas of the Old and New Worlds, that in recent years included mainly immigrants ‘visiting friends and relatives’ and Italian tourists. This positive trend likely depends on better diagnosis and reporting; however, we suspect that many CL cases remained unrecognized. Given the relatively low incidence of leishmaniasis importation, the risk of introduction of exotic parasites appears limited, although the detection of anthroponotic species requires attention. Public Library of Science 2015-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4482607/ /pubmed/26114938 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129418 Text en © 2015 Di Muccio et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Di Muccio, Trentina
Scalone, Aldo
Bruno, Antonella
Marangi, Massimo
Grande, Romualdo
Armignacco, Orlando
Gradoni, Luigi
Gramiccia, Marina
Epidemiology of Imported Leishmaniasis in Italy: Implications for a European Endemic Country
title Epidemiology of Imported Leishmaniasis in Italy: Implications for a European Endemic Country
title_full Epidemiology of Imported Leishmaniasis in Italy: Implications for a European Endemic Country
title_fullStr Epidemiology of Imported Leishmaniasis in Italy: Implications for a European Endemic Country
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiology of Imported Leishmaniasis in Italy: Implications for a European Endemic Country
title_short Epidemiology of Imported Leishmaniasis in Italy: Implications for a European Endemic Country
title_sort epidemiology of imported leishmaniasis in italy: implications for a european endemic country
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4482607/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26114938
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129418
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