Epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of people with neurocysticercosis in Tanzania - A cross-sectional study

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Epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of people with neurocysticercosis in Tanzania - A cross-sectional study. / Stelzle, Dominik; Makasi, Charles; Schmidt, Veronika; Trevisan, Chiara; van Damme, Inge; Welte, Tamara M; Ruether, Charlotte; Fleury, Agnes; Dorny, Pierre; Magnussen, Pascal; Zulu, Gideon; Mwape, Kabemba E; Bottieau, Emmanuel; Gabriël, Sarah; Ngowi, Bernard J; Winkler, Andrea S; SOLID collaborators.

In: PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases , Vol. 16, No. 11, e0010911, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Stelzle, D, Makasi, C, Schmidt, V, Trevisan, C, van Damme, I, Welte, TM, Ruether, C, Fleury, A, Dorny, P, Magnussen, P, Zulu, G, Mwape, KE, Bottieau, E, Gabriël, S, Ngowi, BJ, Winkler, AS & SOLID collaborators 2022, 'Epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of people with neurocysticercosis in Tanzania - A cross-sectional study', PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases , vol. 16, no. 11, e0010911. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010911

APA

Stelzle, D., Makasi, C., Schmidt, V., Trevisan, C., van Damme, I., Welte, T. M., Ruether, C., Fleury, A., Dorny, P., Magnussen, P., Zulu, G., Mwape, K. E., Bottieau, E., Gabriël, S., Ngowi, B. J., Winkler, A. S., & SOLID collaborators (2022). Epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of people with neurocysticercosis in Tanzania - A cross-sectional study. PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases , 16(11), [e0010911]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010911

Vancouver

Stelzle D, Makasi C, Schmidt V, Trevisan C, van Damme I, Welte TM et al. Epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of people with neurocysticercosis in Tanzania - A cross-sectional study. PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases . 2022;16(11). e0010911. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0010911

Author

Stelzle, Dominik ; Makasi, Charles ; Schmidt, Veronika ; Trevisan, Chiara ; van Damme, Inge ; Welte, Tamara M ; Ruether, Charlotte ; Fleury, Agnes ; Dorny, Pierre ; Magnussen, Pascal ; Zulu, Gideon ; Mwape, Kabemba E ; Bottieau, Emmanuel ; Gabriël, Sarah ; Ngowi, Bernard J ; Winkler, Andrea S ; SOLID collaborators. / Epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of people with neurocysticercosis in Tanzania - A cross-sectional study. In: PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases . 2022 ; Vol. 16, No. 11.

Bibtex

@article{11c24cb152d049aaa465da536d62a385,
title = "Epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of people with neurocysticercosis in Tanzania - A cross-sectional study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Neurocysticercosis (NCC) is common among people with epilepsy in low-resource settings. Prevalence of NCC and radiological characteristics of patients with NCC vary considerably even within small areas but differences have been poorly characterized so far.METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study between August 2018 and April 2020 in three district hospitals in southern Tanzania (Ifisi, Tukuyu and Vwawa). Patients with and without epileptic seizures were included in this study. All patients were tested with a novel antibody-detecting point-of-care test for the diagnosis of Taenia solium cysticercosis. All test positives and a subset of test negatives had a further clinical work-up including medical examination and computed tomography of the brain. NCC was defined according to the Del Brutto criteria. We assessed epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of patients with NCC by presence of epileptic seizures and by serology status.RESULTS: In all three district hospitals, more than 30% of all people with epileptic seizures (PWE) had NCC lesions in their brain (38% in Vwawa, 32% in Tukuyu and 31% in Ifisi). Most PWE with NCC had multiple lesions and mostly parenchymal lesions (at least 85%). If patients were serologically positive, they had in the median more lesions than serologically negative patients (15 [interquartile range 8-29] versus 5 [1.8-11]), and only serologically positive patients had active stage lesions. Furthermore, serologically positive PWE had more lesions than serologically positive people without epileptic seizures (10.5 [7-23]), and more often had active lesions. PWE diagnosed with NCC (n = 53) were older, and more commonly had focal onset seizures (68% versus 44%, p = 0.03) and headache episodes (34% versus 14%, p = 0.06), which were also stronger than in PWE without NCC (p = 0.04).CONCLUSION: NCC is common among PWE. A combination of clinical and serological factors could help to establish an algorithm to identify patients potentially suffering from active NCC, who benefit from further clinical investigation including neuroimaging.",
author = "Dominik Stelzle and Charles Makasi and Veronika Schmidt and Chiara Trevisan and {van Damme}, Inge and Welte, {Tamara M} and Charlotte Ruether and Agnes Fleury and Pierre Dorny and Pascal Magnussen and Gideon Zulu and Mwape, {Kabemba E} and Emmanuel Bottieau and Sarah Gabri{\"e}l and Ngowi, {Bernard J} and Winkler, {Andrea S} and {SOLID collaborators}",
note = "Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 Stelzle et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pntd.0010911",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
journal = "P L o S Neglected Tropical Diseases (Online)",
issn = "1935-2735",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of people with neurocysticercosis in Tanzania - A cross-sectional study

AU - Stelzle, Dominik

AU - Makasi, Charles

AU - Schmidt, Veronika

AU - Trevisan, Chiara

AU - van Damme, Inge

AU - Welte, Tamara M

AU - Ruether, Charlotte

AU - Fleury, Agnes

AU - Dorny, Pierre

AU - Magnussen, Pascal

AU - Zulu, Gideon

AU - Mwape, Kabemba E

AU - Bottieau, Emmanuel

AU - Gabriël, Sarah

AU - Ngowi, Bernard J

AU - Winkler, Andrea S

AU - SOLID collaborators

N1 - Copyright: © 2022 Stelzle et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - BACKGROUND: Neurocysticercosis (NCC) is common among people with epilepsy in low-resource settings. Prevalence of NCC and radiological characteristics of patients with NCC vary considerably even within small areas but differences have been poorly characterized so far.METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study between August 2018 and April 2020 in three district hospitals in southern Tanzania (Ifisi, Tukuyu and Vwawa). Patients with and without epileptic seizures were included in this study. All patients were tested with a novel antibody-detecting point-of-care test for the diagnosis of Taenia solium cysticercosis. All test positives and a subset of test negatives had a further clinical work-up including medical examination and computed tomography of the brain. NCC was defined according to the Del Brutto criteria. We assessed epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of patients with NCC by presence of epileptic seizures and by serology status.RESULTS: In all three district hospitals, more than 30% of all people with epileptic seizures (PWE) had NCC lesions in their brain (38% in Vwawa, 32% in Tukuyu and 31% in Ifisi). Most PWE with NCC had multiple lesions and mostly parenchymal lesions (at least 85%). If patients were serologically positive, they had in the median more lesions than serologically negative patients (15 [interquartile range 8-29] versus 5 [1.8-11]), and only serologically positive patients had active stage lesions. Furthermore, serologically positive PWE had more lesions than serologically positive people without epileptic seizures (10.5 [7-23]), and more often had active lesions. PWE diagnosed with NCC (n = 53) were older, and more commonly had focal onset seizures (68% versus 44%, p = 0.03) and headache episodes (34% versus 14%, p = 0.06), which were also stronger than in PWE without NCC (p = 0.04).CONCLUSION: NCC is common among PWE. A combination of clinical and serological factors could help to establish an algorithm to identify patients potentially suffering from active NCC, who benefit from further clinical investigation including neuroimaging.

AB - BACKGROUND: Neurocysticercosis (NCC) is common among people with epilepsy in low-resource settings. Prevalence of NCC and radiological characteristics of patients with NCC vary considerably even within small areas but differences have been poorly characterized so far.METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study between August 2018 and April 2020 in three district hospitals in southern Tanzania (Ifisi, Tukuyu and Vwawa). Patients with and without epileptic seizures were included in this study. All patients were tested with a novel antibody-detecting point-of-care test for the diagnosis of Taenia solium cysticercosis. All test positives and a subset of test negatives had a further clinical work-up including medical examination and computed tomography of the brain. NCC was defined according to the Del Brutto criteria. We assessed epidemiological, clinical and radiological characteristics of patients with NCC by presence of epileptic seizures and by serology status.RESULTS: In all three district hospitals, more than 30% of all people with epileptic seizures (PWE) had NCC lesions in their brain (38% in Vwawa, 32% in Tukuyu and 31% in Ifisi). Most PWE with NCC had multiple lesions and mostly parenchymal lesions (at least 85%). If patients were serologically positive, they had in the median more lesions than serologically negative patients (15 [interquartile range 8-29] versus 5 [1.8-11]), and only serologically positive patients had active stage lesions. Furthermore, serologically positive PWE had more lesions than serologically positive people without epileptic seizures (10.5 [7-23]), and more often had active lesions. PWE diagnosed with NCC (n = 53) were older, and more commonly had focal onset seizures (68% versus 44%, p = 0.03) and headache episodes (34% versus 14%, p = 0.06), which were also stronger than in PWE without NCC (p = 0.04).CONCLUSION: NCC is common among PWE. A combination of clinical and serological factors could help to establish an algorithm to identify patients potentially suffering from active NCC, who benefit from further clinical investigation including neuroimaging.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pntd.0010911

DO - 10.1371/journal.pntd.0010911

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36441777

VL - 16

JO - P L o S Neglected Tropical Diseases (Online)

JF - P L o S Neglected Tropical Diseases (Online)

SN - 1935-2735

IS - 11

M1 - e0010911

ER -

ID: 327134163