Artículos de revistas
Frequency of the Congenital Transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Fecha
2013-08Registro en:
Buekens, Pierre; Sosa-estani, Sergio Alejandro; Carlier, Yves; Xiong, Xu; Howard, Elizabeth J.; Frequency of the Congenital Transmission of Trypanosoma cruzi: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis; Wiley; BJOG - An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology; 121; 1; 8-2013; 22-33
1470-0328
1471-0528
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Howard, Elizabeth J.
Xiong, Xu
Carlier, Yves
Sosa-estani, Sergio Alejandro
Buekens, Pierre
Resumen
BACKGROUND: Chagas disease is caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi and is endemic in much of Latin America. With increased globalisation and immigration, it is a risk in any country, partly through congenital transmission. The frequency of congenital transmission is unclear.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the frequency of congenital transmission of T. cruzi.
SEARCH STRATEGY: PubMed, Journals@Ovid Full Text, EMBASE, CINAHL, Fuente Academica and BIREME databases were searched using seven search terms related to Chagas disease or T. cruzi and congenital transmission.
SELECTION CRITERIA: The inclusion criteria were the following: Dutch, English, French, Portuguese or Spanish language; case report, case series or observational study; original data on congenital T. cruzi infection in humans; congenital infection rate reported or it could be derived. This systematic review included 13 case reports/series and 51 observational studies.
DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Two investigators independently collected data on study characteristics, diagnosis and congenital infection rate. The principal summary measure - the congenital transmission rate - is defined as the number of congenitally infected infants divided by the number of infants born to infected mothers. A random effects model was used.
MAIN RESULTS: The pooled congenital transmission rate was 4.7% (95% confidence interval: 3.9-5.6%). Countries where T. cruzi is endemic had a higher rate of congenital transmission compared with countries where it is not endemic (5.0% versus 2.7%).
CONCLUSIONS: Congenital transmission of Chagas disease is a global problem. Overall risk of congenital infection in infants born to infected mothers is about 5%. The congenital mode of transmission requires targeted screening to prevent future cases of Chagas disease.