Schistosomiasis |
A parasitic worm which
affects millions of the world's poorest people may hold an important but
little-known key to cutting the spread of HIV, researchers said ahead of a
conference on the issue in London.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
Schistosomiasis
affects at least 250 million people. It is caused by parasitic worms, picked up
in infested waters, which drill through people's skin and lay eggs in their
bodies.
If
the worms lay eggs in a woman's genital areas, including the vagina and cervix,
they can cause lesions which make women more vulnerable to HIV, experts in the
tropical disease said.
Women
are three times more likely to be infected with HIV if they have female genital
schistosomiasis (FGS), studies carried out in Zimbabwe, Tanzania, South Africa
and Mozambique have found.
"It's
going completely under the radar," Marianne Comparet, director of the
London-based International Society for Neglected Tropical Diseases (ISNTD),
said in an interview.
"Treating
one could really impact on the other," she told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation.
Men
with the worms in their genitals show a sharp increase in the amount of HIV
virus in their semen, researchers said.
The
treatment for schistosomiasis is cheap - the drug has been donated for years to
the World Health Organization (WHO), so this could be a relatively easy way to
help cut the spread of HIV, experts said.
"In
the same way that circumcision came out as something that really changed the
way people approached HIV transmission, this could really be the next big thing
in controlling HIV transmission," Comparet said.
Circumcision
has been found to cut the spread of HIV among heterosexuals and is recommended
by the WHO as a means of prevention.
Nearly
37 million people live with HIV, the majority in Africa.
A
LITTLE-KNOWN DISEASE
It
is not known how many people have FGS, but estimates range from 20 million to
80 million, the vast majority in Africa.
According
to the WHO, most cases of FGS are undiagnosed and few medical staff are aware
of its existence. It gets no mention in medical textbooks or nursing curricula
in any of the countries where schistosomiasis is endemic, WHO says.
The
U.N. agency recommends the regular treatment of young girls through mass drug
administration in schools and communities to prevent FGS from developing.
Treatment
kills adult worms but it cannot reverse damage they have already done to
people's organs and tissues.
"It
starts early on, and then when you are a young woman, without any treatment it
becomes really serious, and when women become sexually active they are very
vulnerable to HIV," Jutta Reinhard-Rupp at Merck Serono said in an
interview.
Merck
Serono produces praziquantel, the only treatment available for schistosomiasis.
FGS
can also cause other complications including infertility and ectopic
pregnancies.
The
link between FGS and HIV is very difficult to prove in a clinical study because
it not possible to have a control group that is left untreated, Reinhard-Rupp
said.
Another
possible link is between schistosomiasis in men's genitals and the spread of
the HIV virus.
Men
with both diseases had an HIV viral load in their semen 10 times bigger than
that of men without schistosomiasis, according to initial findings from a
small-scale study carried out in Zimbabwe last year.
After
treatment for schistosomiasis, the viral load returned to normal levels.
The
findings will be made public at the ISNTD Coinfections conference in London on
Friday.
Many
countries in southern Africa are seriously affected by both schistosomiasis and
HIV, Peter Leutscher, who is a professor at Aarhus University Hospital and
helped carry out the research, said in a telephone interview.
"This
overlap of HIV and schistosomiasis is really striking," he told the
Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"It's
a neglected risk factor" in the fight against HIV, he said.
Leutscher wants genital schistosomiasis to be included alongside other risks involved in the spread of HIV like the number of sexual partners, condom use, circumcision, and other sexually transmitted diseases.
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