Advances in Parasitology, Volume 104, Pages 247-326 , 01/01/2019

Diagnosis and drug resistance of human soil-transmitted helminth infections: A public health perspective

Polydor Ngoy Mutombo, Nicola W.Y. Man, Peter Nejsum, Robert Ricketson, Catherine A. Gordon, Gemma Robertson, Archie C.A. Clements, Nathalie Chacón-Fonseca, Veeranoot Nissapatorn, Joanne P. Webster, Mary Louise McLaws

Abstract

Soil-transmitted helminth (STH) infections represent a major public health problem globally, particularly among socio-economically disadvantaged populations. Detection of STH infections is often challenging, requiring a combination of diagnostic techniques to achieve acceptable sensitivity and specificity, particularly in low infection-intensity situations. The microscopy-based Kato-Katz remains the most widely used method but has low sensitivity in the detection of, for instance, Strongyloides spp. infections, among others. Antigen/antibody assays can be more sensitive but are parasite species-specific. Highly sensitive PCR methods have been developed to be multiplexed to allow multi-species detection. Novel diagnostic tests for all STH species are needed for effective monitoring, evaluation of chemotherapy programmes, and to assess the potential emergence of parasite resistance. This review discusses available diagnostic methods for the different stages of STH control programmes, which vary in sensitivity and spectrum of detection requirements, and tools to evaluate drug efficacy and resistance.

Document Type

Book Chapter

Source Type

Book Series

ISBN

[9780128177167]

ISSN

0065308X

Keywords

Diagnostic evaluationSoil-transmitted helminths controlSTH programmesStrongyloides

ASJC Subject Area

Immunology and Microbiology : Parasitology

Funding Agency

Royal Melbourne Hospital


Bibliography


Mutombo, P., Man, N., Nejsum, P., Ricketson, R., Gordon, C., Robertson, G., Clements, A., ... McLaws, M. (2019). Diagnosis and drug resistance of human soil-transmitted helminth infections: A public health perspective. Advances in Parasitology, 104247-326. doi:10.1016/bs.apar.2019.02.004

Copy | Save