4.6 Review

Lobomycosis Epidemiology and Management: The Quest for a Cure for the Most Neglected of Neglected Tropical Diseases

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof8050494

Keywords

keloidal blastomycosis; Jorge Lobo's Disease; Lacazia; Lacaziosis; lobomycosis

Funding

  1. Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development [CNPq grant] [307432/2019-0]

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Lobomycosis is a chronic disease endemic to the Amazon rainforest in Brazil, caused by Lacazia loboi. The lack of disease control program and therapeutic protocol has led to unknown disease prevalence and unmet needs of affected individuals. However, an effective therapy has been discovered through extensive research, opening new avenues for future studies. It is recommended that lobomycosis be reported as a disease to ensure accurate measurement of disease prevalence and provide free access to treatment for affected individuals.
Lobomycosis is a chronic disease caused by Lacazia loboi, which is endemic to the Amazon rainforest, where it affects forest dwellers in Brazil. There is no disease control program and no official therapeutic protocol. This situation contributes to an unknown disease prevalence and unmet needs of people disabled by this disease who seek access to treatment. This review provides an update on the subject with an emphasis on therapeutic advances in humans. All relevant studies that addressed epidemiology, diagnosis, or therapeutics of lobomycosis were considered. Seventy-one articles published between 1931 and 2021 were included for a narrative literature review on the epidemiology and quest for a cure. An effective therapy for lobomycosis has been found following decades of research led by the State Dermatology Program of Acre in the Amazon rainforest, where the largest number of cases occur. This discovery opened new avenues for future studies. The main recommendations here, addressed to the Brazilian Ministry of Health, are for lobomycosis to become a reportable disease to ensure that disease prevalence is measured, and that it be prioritized such that affected individuals may access treatment free-of-charge.

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