6533b7dcfe1ef96bd1272c94

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Zoonotic Dirofilaria immitis and Dirofilaria repens infection in humans and an integrative approach to the diagnosis

Jairo Alfonso Mendoza-roldanMarcos Antônio Bezerra-santosDomenico OtrantoDomenico OtrantoSimona GabrielliEmanuele BriantiMaria Stefania LatrofaGiovanni BenelliAntonio CascioRanju Ravindran Santhakumari Manoj

subject

dogsDirofilaria immitisVeterinary (miscellaneous)PopulationDirofilaria immitisDirofilariasiCanine heartworm disease; Dirofilariasis; Dogs; Humans; One Health; Vector-borne zoonosis; Animals; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Humans; Islands; Italy; Phylogeny; Seroepidemiologic Studies; Dirofilaria immitis; Dirofilaria repens; Dirofilariasis; ZoonosesRepensVector-borne zoonosis.one healthdirofilariasisSeroepidemiologic StudiesZoonosesDirofilariasisparasitic diseasesDogcanine heartworm disease; dirofilariasis; dogs; humans; one health; vector-borne zoonosismedicineAnimalsSeroprevalenceDog DiseaseshumanseducationPhylogenyDirofilariaIslandseducation.field_of_studybiologycanine heartworm diseasebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyDirofilaria repensInfectious DiseasesItalyInsect ScienceDirofilaria repensParasitologyWolbachiavector-borne zoonosisHuman

description

Abstract Dirofilariosis by Dirofilaria immitis and Dirofilaria repens is endemic in dogs from countries of the Mediterranean basin. Both species may infect humans, with most of the infected patients remaining asymptomatic. Based on the recent description of the southernmost hyperendemic European focus of heartworm disease in dogs from the Pelagie archipelagos, we performed a serological and molecular survey in human population of that area. Human blood samples were collected in the islands of Linosa (n=101) and Lampedusa (n=296) and tested by ELISA and molecular test for the detection of D. immitis and D. repens. Samples were also screened for filarioid-associated endosymbionts, Wolbachia sp. The seroprevalence of D. immitis and D. repens was, respectively, 7.9% and 3.96% in Linosa, and 7.77% and 19.93% in Lampedusa. Out of 397 human blood samples tested molecularly, 4 scored positive (1%) for Dirofilaria spp. by qPCR (i.e., three for D. immitis and one for D. repens) and 6 (1.5%) for Wolbachia. Of the qPCR positive for Dirofilaria spp., only D. repens was amplified by cPCR and was positive for Wolbachia. In the phylogenetic analysis, the sequence of Wolbachia detected in D. repens positive samples clustered along with other C supergroup filarioids. Our results overlap with the recent prevalence data collected on dogs from the same area, where D. immitis is prevalent in Linosa and D. repens prevails in Lampedusa. Molecular detection of D. immitis in human blood is quite unusual considering that humans are dead-end hosts for dirofilarial infection and most of the human cases described so far in Europe were ascribed to D. repens. An integrative diagnostic approach using serum analysis and Wolbachia detection is also presented. In endemic areas for canine dirofilarioses humans are exposed to the infection, suggesting the importance of One Health approach in diagnosing, treating and controlling this zoonotic parasitosis.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actatropica.2021.106083