Amongst the treatable cause of blindness among young people, fungal keratitis ranks high. There are an estimated 1,051,787 to 1,480,916 eyes affected annually, with 8–11% of patients having to have the eye removed. Diagnosis requires a corneal scraping, direct microscopy and fungal culture with a large number of airborne fungi implicated. Treatment involves the intensive application of antifungal eye drops, preferably natamycin, often combined with surgery. In low-resource settings, inappropriate corticosteroid eye drops, ineffective antibacterial therapy, diagnostic delay or no diagnosis all contribute to poor ocular outcomes with blindness (unilateral or bilateral) common. Modern detailed guidelines on fungal keratitis diagnosis and management are lacking. Here, we argue that fungal keratitis should be included as a neglected tropical disease, which would facilitate greater awareness of the condition, improved diagnostic capability, and access to affordable antifungal eye medicine.
C holera is an acute life-threatening diarrheal disease responsible for ≈4.3 million cases and 142,000 deaths annually worldwide (1). Excluding epidemic peaks in Haiti and Yemen (2,3), most cases of cholera originate from sub-Saharan Africa, predominantly the African Great Lakes Region (AGLR); specifically, the countries of the Lake Tanganyika basin (4). Many recurrent cholera outbreaks in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Tanzania, Burundi, and Zambia have been linked to a common hotspot area around the Lake Tanganyika basin (5-8).By the end of 2018, the World Health Organization had noted a steady decline in cholera cases throughout the world, including the AGLR (9). Continuous genomic surveillance of circulating Vibrio cholerae bacteria strains is required to understand the transmission dynamics and genetic evolution of V. cholerae and potentially to guide prevention and response interventions to continue the trend toward decreasing case numbers, in line with the global cholera roadmap to 2030 (10). One lineage, seventh pandemic V. cholerae O1 El Tor (7PET), is responsible for the current pandemic, which began in 1961 (11); Africa was hit by 7PET in 1970 (11). During 1970-2014, >11 different 7PET sublineages were introduced from South Asia into Africa, and sublineage AFR10 (previously T10) replaced AFR5 (previously T5) in the AGLR in the late 1990s (11). Sublineage AFR13 (previously T13) was identified in East Africa (Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya) and Zimbabwe (12). We tracked the 7PET populations circulating in the Lake Tanganyika basin by studying recent V. cholerae O1 isolates collected in the region by conventional bacteriology and genomics and placing these genomes in a broader phylogenetic context to elucidate their evolutionary history. The StudyWe analyzed 96 V. cholerae O1 isolates collected during 2015-2020 in DRC (86 clinical isolates, including 39 collected in 2018-2020) and Tanzania (10 environmental isolates from fish and lake water) (Appendix 1, https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/EID/article/29/1/22-0641-App1.pdf; Appendix 2 Table 1, https://wwwnc. cdc.gov/EID/article/29/1/22-0641-App2.xlsx). We subjected the isolates to antimicrobial susceptibility testing, whole-genome sequencing, genomic characterization, and phylogenetic analyses, as previously Genomic Microevolution ofVibrio cholerae O1,
Background In symptomatic patients, the diagnostic approach of COVID-19 should be holistic. We aimed to evaluate the concordance between RT-PCR and serological tests (IgM/IgG), and identify the factors that best predict mortality (clinical stages or viral load). Methods The study included 242 patients referred to the University hospital of Kinshasa for suspected COVID-19, dyspnea or ARDS between June 1st, 2020 and August 02, 2020. Both antibody-SARS-CoV2 IgM/IgG and RT-PCR method were performed on the day of admission to hospital. The clinical stages were established according to the COVID-19 WHO classification. The viral load was expressed by the CtN2 (cycle threshold value of the nucleoproteins) and the CtE (envelope) genes of SARS- CoV-2 detected using GeneXpert. Kappa test and Cox regression were used as appropriate. Results The GeneXpert was positive in 74 patients (30.6%). Seventy two patients (29.8%) had positive IgM and 34 patients (14.0%) had positive IgG. The combination of RT-PCR and serological tests made it possible to treat 104 patients as having COVID-19, which represented an increase in cases of around 41% compared to the result based on GeneXpert alone. The comparison between the two tests has shown that 57 patients (23.5%) had discordant results. The Kappa coefficient was 0.451 (p < 0.001). We recorded 23 deaths (22.1%) among the COVID-19 patients vs 8 deaths (5.8%) among other patients. The severe-critical clinical stage increased the risk of mortality vs. mild-moderate stage (aHR: 26.8, p < 0.001). The values of CtE and CtN2 did not influence mortality significantly. Conclusion In symptomatic patients, serological tests are a support which makes it possible to refer patients to the dedicated COVID-19 units and treat a greater number of COVID-19 patients. WHO Clinical classification seems to predict mortality better than SARS-Cov2 viral load.
A literature review was conducted to assess the burden of serious fungal infections in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) (population 95,326,000). English and French publications were listed and analysed using PubMed/Medline, Google Scholar and the African Journals database. Publication dates spanning 1943–2020 were included in the scope of the review. From the analysis of published articles, we estimate a total of about 5,177,000 people (5.4%) suffer from serious fungal infections in the DRC annually. The incidence of cryptococcal meningitis, Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia in adults and invasive aspergillosis in AIDS patients was estimated at 6168, 2800 and 380 cases per year. Oral and oesophageal candidiasis represent 50,470 and 28,800 HIV‐infected patients respectively. Chronic pulmonary aspergillosis post‐tuberculosis incidence and prevalence was estimated to be 54,700. Fungal asthma (allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis and severe asthma with fungal sensitization) probably has a prevalence of 88,800 and 117,200. The estimated prevalence of recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis and tinea capitis is 1,202,640 and 3,551,900 respectively.Further work is required to provide additional studies on opportunistic infections for improving diagnosis and the implementation of a national surveillance programme of fungal disease in the DRC.
Four cholera outbreaks were reported in the Central African Republic during 1997–2016. We show that the outbreak isolates were Vibrio cholerae O1 serotype Inaba from 3 seventh pandemic El Tor sublineages originating from West Africa (sublineages T7 and T9) or the African Great Lakes Region (T10).
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