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Bartonella Species in Cambodia, Ghana, Laos, and Peru: Results from Vector and Serosurveys

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VECTOR-BORNE AND ZOONOTIC DISEASES
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 9-17

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MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/vbz.2021.0090

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Bartonella; serology; surveillance

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This study screened residual sera from undifferentiated fever study participants in Cambodia, Ghana, Laos, and Peru to investigate human exposure to Bartonella species. Among 48 patients with suspected or confirmed Bartonella bacilliformis exposure or infection in Peru, 10 were Bartonella-specific IgG positive. Additionally, positive serology was found in samples from Peru, Laos, Cambodia, and Ghana. Fleas from Cambodia were found to carry Bartonella DNA, suggesting that fleas may serve as a vector for human exposure to Bartonella.
Background: Bartonella species are fastidious gram-negative vector-borne bacteria with a wide range of mammalian reservoirs. While it is understood that some species of Bartonella are human pathogens, the extent of human exposure to Bartonella species (both pathogenic and nonpathogenic) is yet to be fully understood.Materials and Methods: To this end, residual sera from participants enrolled in undifferentiated fever studies in Cambodia, Ghana, Laos, and Peru were screened for the presence of IgG antibodies against Bartonella quintana and Bartonella henselae, using the FOCUS diagnostics Dual Spot- Bartonella IgG Immunofluorescence assay. Forty-eight patients with suspected or confirmed Bartonella bacilliformis exposure or infection in Peru were screened to assess cross-reactivity of the FOCUS assay for IgG against other Bartonella species.Results: Ten of 13 patients with confirmed B. bacilliformis infection were Bartonella-specific IgG positive, and overall, 36/48 of the samples were positive. In addition, 79/206, 44/200, 101/180, and 57/100 of the samples from Peru, Laos, Cambodia, and Ghana, respectively, were Bartonella-specific IgG positive. Furthermore, ectoparasite pools from Cambodia, Laos, and Peru were tested using quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) for the presence of Bartonella DNA. Of the sand fly pools collected in Peru, 0/196 were qPCR positive; 15/140 flea pools collected in Cambodia were qPCR positive; while 0/105 ticks, 0/22 fleas, and 0/3 louse pools collected in Laos tested positive for Bartonella DNA.Conclusion: Evidence of Bartonella in fleas from Cambodia supports the possibility that humans are exposed to Bartonella through this traditional vector. However, Bartonella species were not found in fleas, ticks, or lice from Laos, or sand flies from Peru. This could account for the lower positive serology among the population in Laos and the strictly localized nature of B. bacilliformis infections in Peru. Human exposure to the Bartonella species and Bartonella as a human pathogen warrants further investigation.

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