Zoonotic Babesia: A scoping review of the global evidence.

PLoS One

Public Health Risk Sciences Division, National Microbiology Laboratory, Public Health Agency of Canada, Guelph, Ontario, Canada.

Published: April 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Babesiosis is a significant parasitic disease spread by Ixodes ticks, with its first human case identified in 1957, and climate change is likely to affect the spread of this disease and its vectors.
  • - A comprehensive scoping review of 1394 relevant articles highlighted research on various aspects of babesiosis, including pathogenesis, epidemiology, and diagnostic accuracy, but lacking predictive models related to climate change impact.
  • - Major zoonotic Babesia species identified were B. microti, B. divergens, B. duncani, and B. venatorum, and there are notable gaps in research concerning economic impacts and surveillance in vectors and animal hosts.

Article Abstract

Background: Babesiosis is a parasitic vector-borne disease of increasing public health importance. Since the first human case was reported in 1957, zoonotic species have been reported on nearly every continent. Zoonotic Babesia is vectored by Ixodes ticks and is commonly transmitted in North America by Ixodes scapularis, the tick species responsible for transmitting the pathogens that also cause Lyme disease, Powassan virus, and anaplasmosis in humans. Predicted climate change is expected to impact the spread of vectors, which is likely to affect the distribution of vector-borne diseases including human babesiosis.

Methods: A scoping review has been executed to characterize the global evidence on zoonotic babesiosis. Articles were compiled through a comprehensive search of relevant bibliographic databases and targeted government websites. Two reviewers screened titles and abstracts for relevance and characterized full-text articles using a relevance screening and data characterization tool developed a priori.

Results: This review included 1394 articles relevant to human babesiosis and/or zoonotic Babesia species. The main zoonotic species were B. microti, B. divergens, B. duncani and B. venatorum. Articles described a variety of study designs used to study babesiosis in humans and/or zoonotic Babesia species in vectors, animal hosts, and in vitro cell cultures. Topics of study included: pathogenesis (680 articles), epidemiology (480), parasite characterization (243), diagnostic test accuracy (98), mitigation (94), treatment (65), transmission (54), surveillance (29), economic analysis (7), and societal knowledge (1). No articles reported predictive models investigating the impact of climate change on Babesia species.

Conclusion: Knowledge gaps in the current evidence include research on the economic burden associated with babesiosis, societal knowledge studies, surveillance of Babesia species in vectors and animal hosts, and predictive models on the impact of climate change. The scoping review results describe the current knowledge and knowledge gaps on zoonotic Babesia which can be used to inform future policy and decision making.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6936817PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0226781PLOS

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