Title
Direct identification of Leishmania species in biopsies from patients with American tegumentary leishmaniasis
Date Issued
01 January 2003
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Victoir K.
De Doncker S.
Cabrera L.
Alvarez E.
Le Ray D.
Dujardin J.
Publisher(s)
Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Abstract
Accurate identification of Leishmania species is important for monitoring clinical outcome, adequately targeting treatment, and evaluation of epidemiological risk in tegumentary leishmaniasis. This is especially the case in regions where several species coexist and for travel medicine where the geographical source of infection is not always obvious. Species identification presently depends on parasite isolation, which is not very sensitive and not necessarily representative of parasites actually present in human tissues. We evaluated a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay combining amplification of the gp63 genes and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis (gp63 PCR-RFLP) for direct Leishmania species-identification in tissues collected from Peruvian patients in 1999. By comparison with a kinetoplast DNA-based PCR, our PCR assay showed a detection sensitivity of 85%. Three species were encountered among patient samples, Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis, L. (V.) peruviana and L. (V.) guyanensis, and their frequency and geographical distribution corresponded to earlier epidemiological studies of leishmaniasis in Peru. However, unexpected results raised questions about (i) the contribution of human migration to the emergence of new foci of given species, (ii) the pathogenicity of some species, and (iii) the frequency of mixed or hybrid infections.
Start page
80
End page
87
Volume
97
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
PolÃticas de salud, Servicios de salud
ParasitologÃa
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0038637208
PubMed ID
Source
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
ISSN of the container
00359203
Sponsor(s)
We are grateful to Drs Sylvain Brisse (Eijkman-Winkler Institute, Utrecht University, The Netherlands), Umberto D'Alessandro, Fons Van Gompel, Marleen Boelaert and David Davis (ITG, Antwerp, Belgium) for reviewing this manuscript. We thank E. Neyda-Valdez for the Sporothrix schenckii sample and P. A. Fonteyne for the Mycobacterium tuberculosis, M. paratuberculosis, M. ulcerans and M. avium samples. This work was supported by EC (contract IC18-CT96-0123), FWO (Nafionale Loterij, Grants 346/1990 and 9.0024.90), WHO/TDR (contract A00476), the Belgian Agency for Co-operation to Development (DGIS) and the JOBILL Foundation (Utrecht).
Sources of information:
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