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Featured researches published by John H. Ouma.


AIDS | 2005

The Effects of Maternal Helminth and Malaria Infections on Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission

Maureen Gallagher; Indu Malhotra; Peter Mungai; Alex Wamachi; John Kioko; John H. Ouma; Eric M. Muchiri; Christopher L. King

Objective:To investigate the effect of helminth and/or malaria infection on the risk of HIV infection in pregnant women and its transmission to their offspring. Design:A retrospective cohort study of pregnant Kenyan women and their offspring from term, uncomplicated vaginal deliveries (n = 936) with a nested case–control study. Methods:We determined the presence of HIV, malaria, schistosomiasis, lymphatic filariasis, and intestinal helminthes in mothers and tested for HIV antibodies in 12-24 month-old offspring of HIV-positive women. We related these findings to the presence of cord blood lymphocyte activation and cytokine production in response to helminth antigens. Results:HIV-positive women (n = 83, 8.9% of all women tested) were 2-fold more likely to have peripheral blood and/or placental malaria (P < 0.025) and a 2.1-fold greater likelihood of lymphatic filariasis infection (P < 0.001) compared to location-and-parity matched HIV-negative women. Women with HIV and malaria tended to show an increased risk for mother-to-child-transmission (MTCT) of HIV, although this difference was not significant. MTCT of HIV, however, was significantly higher in women co-infected with one or more helminthes (48%) verses women without helminth infections (10%, P < 0.01; adjusted odds ratio, 7.3; 95% confidence interval, 2.4–33.7). This increased risk for MTCT of HIV correlated with cord blood lymphocytes production of interleukin-5/interleukin-13 in response to helminth antigens (P < 0.001). Conclusion:Helminth co-infection is associated with increased risk for MTCT of HIV, possibly by a mechanism in which parasite antigens activates lymphocytes in utero. Treatment of helminthic infections during pregnancy may reduce the risk of MTCT of HIV.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1998

The contribution of hookworm and other parasitic infections to haemoglobin and iron status among children and adults in western Kenya

Annette Olsen; Pascal Magnussen; John H. Ouma; J. Andreassen; Henrik Friis

A cross-sectional study of 729 children and adults in western Kenya investigated the impact of infection with hookworm, Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichuris trichiura, Schistosoma mansoni and malaria on iron status. In bivariate analyses, hookworm intensities as low as 300 eggs/g of faeces were negatively related to levels of haemoglobin (Hb) and serum ferritin (SF). Malaria parasitaemia was negatively related to Hb and positively related to SF, while S. mansoni intensities were negatively related to SF. Multivariate regression analysis was done to identify predictors of Hb and SF levels. In children, age (in years) was the only predictor for Hb (B = 1.7 g/L) and only malaria parasitaemia (negative, light, moderate, heavy) was retained in the model for log10 SF (B = 0.097 microgram/L). In adults, hookworm infection and malaria parasitaemia together with age, sex, pregnancy, SF levels < 12 micrograms/L and elevated body temperature were significant predictors of low Hb. The regression coefficient for hookworm egg count (for increments of 100 eggs/g) was -1.3 g/L. Significant interactions between sex and age and between sex and malaria parasitaemia were revealed. Age and malaria parasitaemia were significant predictors only among females, with a regression coefficient for malaria parasitaemia of -6.9 g/L. The regression coefficient for hookworm did not change when SF < 12 micrograms/L was taken out of the model, indicating that the effect of hookworm cannot be explained by low iron stores alone. Using SF as the dependent variable, hookworm and S. mansoni intensities together with age and sex were retained in the model. The regression coefficients for hookworm egg count (increments of 100 eggs/g) and S. mansoni egg count (increments of 10 eggs/g) were -0.011 microgram/L and -0.012 microgram/L, respectively. Iron deficiency was a problem in this population and hookworm infections contributed significantly to this situation.


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Distinct Th1- and Th2-Type Prenatal Cytokine Responses to Plasmodium falciparum Erythrocyte Invasion Ligands

Indu Malhotra; Peter Mungai; Eric M. Muchiri; John H. Ouma; Shobhona Sharma; James W. Kazura; Christopher L. King

ABSTRACT Prenatal immunity to Plasmodium falciparum merozoite proteins involved in erythrocyte invasion may contribute to the partial protection against malaria that is acquired during infancy in areas of stable malaria transmission. We examined newborn and maternal cytokine and antibody responses to merozoite surface protein-1 (MSP-1), ribosomal phosphoprotein P0 (PfP0), and region II of erythrocyte binding antigen-175 (EBA-175) in infant-mother pairs in Kenya. Overall, 82 of 167 (50%), 106 of 176 (60%), and 38 of 84 (45%) cord blood lymphocytes (CBL) from newborns produced one or more cytokines in response to MSP-1, PfP0, and EBA-175, respectively. Newborns of primigravid and/or malaria-infected women were more likely to have antigen-responsive CBL than were newborns of multigravid and/or uninfected women at delivery. Newborn cytokine responses did not match those of their mothers and fell into three distinct categories, Th1 (21 of 55 CBL donors produced only gamma interferon and/or interleukin 2 [IL-2]), Th2 (21 of 55 produced only IL-5 and/or IL-13), and mixed Th1/Th2 (13 of 55). Newborns produced more IL-10 than adults. High and low levels of cord blood IL-12 p70 production induced by anti-CD40 activation were associated with malaria-specific Th1 and Th2 responses, respectively. Antigen-responsive CBL in some newborns were detected only after depletion of IL-10-secreting CD8 cells with enrichment for CD4 cells. These data indicate that prenatal sensitization to blood-stage Plasmodium falciparum occurs frequently in areas where malaria is holoendemic. Modulation of this immunity, possibly by maternal parity and malaria, may affect the acquisition of protective immunity against malaria during infancy.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2003

Efficacy and side effects of praziquantel treatment in a highly endemic Schistosoma mansoni focus at Lake Albert, Uganda

Narcis B. Kabatereine; Jovanice Kemijumbi; John H. Ouma; R. F. Sturrock; Anthony E. Butterworth; Henry Madsen; N. Ørnbjerg; David W. Dunne; B.J. Vennnervald

The aim of the study was to assess the efficacy and side effects following single and repeated (6 weeks apart) praziquantel treatment (40 mg/kg) in a Schistosoma mansoni-endemic focus with long-standing transmission at Lake Albert in Uganda between December 1996 and January 1997. The results were based on 482 individuals, randomly representing all age and both gender groups. The cure rate following the first and second treatments was 41.9% and 69.1%, respectively. The cure rate was higher in adults than in children, irrespective of intensity of infection. In addition, the cure rate declined markedly with increasing intensity of infection. The reduction in intensity of infection was marked, being 97.7% and 99.6% after the first and second treatments, respectively. A pre- and post-treatment symptom questionnaire revealed a broad range of side effects, including abdominal pain and diarrhoea. However, no serious or long-lasting complications affecting compliance were observed. The marked reductions in faecal egg excretion and the acceptable level of side effects point to a single praziquantel treatment (40mg/kg) as the strategy of choice in such a highly endemic S. mansoni focus.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2004

Micro-geographical variation in exposure to Schistosoma mansoni and malaria, and exacerbation of splenomegaly in Kenyan school-aged children

Mark Booth; Birgitte J. Vennervald; LeeCarol Kenty; Anthony E. Butterworth; Henry C. Kariuki; Hilda Kadzo; Edmund Ireri; Clifford Amaganga; Gachuhi Kimani; Joseph K. Mwatha; Amos Otedo; John H. Ouma; Eric M. Muchiri; David W. Dunne

BackgroundSchistosoma mansoni and Plasmodium falciparum are common infections of school aged children in Kenya. They both cause enlargement of the spleen, but their relative contribution to the condition of splenomegaly remains unknown in areas where both infections are endemic. Here, we have investigated whether relatively high exposure to both infections has a clinically measurable effect on this condition.Methods96 children aged 6–16 years living along a ten kilometre stretch and within 4 km south of a river that is a source of both S. mansoni and malaria infections were examined clinically for splenomegaly along the mid clavicular line (MCL) and mid axillary line (MAL). The survey was conducted outside the malaria transmission season. The consistency of the organ was recorded as soft, firm or hard. Mapping of the locations of houses and the course of the river was undertaken. Egg counts were mapped at the household level, as were IgG3 responses to Plasmodium falciparum schizont antigen (anti-Pfs IgG3), in order to identify areas with relatively high exposure to both infections, either infection or neither infection. ANOVA was used to test for differences in egg counts, IgG3 levels and the magnitude of spleen enlargement between these areas.Results4 contiguous sectors were identified, one where anti-Pfs IgG3 responses and S. mansoni egg counts were both high, one where only anti-Pfs IgG3 responses were high, one where only egg counts were high, and one where both anti-Pfs IgG3 responses and egg counts were low. Spleen MAL and MCL values were significantly higher amongst children from the sector with highest IgG3 levels and highest egg counts but similar amongst children from elsewhere. Both egg counts and anti-Pfs IgG3 responses were significantly higher in children with MAL values >=4 cm. Hardening of spleens was associated with proximity of domicile to the river.ConclusionsMicro-geographical variation in exposure to S. mansoni and malaria infections can be exploited to investigate the chronic impact of these two infections. These results provide firm evidence that relatively high exposure to both infections exacerbates splenomegaly even outside the malaria transmission season. Major implications include assessing the burden of infection in school age-children.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2005

Earth-eating and reinfection with intestinal helminths among pregnant and lactating women in western Kenya

Alfred I. Luoba; P. Wenzel Geissler; Benson Estambale; John H. Ouma; Dorcas Alusala; Rosemary Ayah; David Mwaniki; Pascal Magnussen; Henrik Friis

We conducted a longitudinal study among 827 pregnant women in Nyanza Province, western Kenya, to determine the effect of earth‐eating on geohelminth reinfection after treatment. The women were recruited at a gestational age of 14–24u2003weeks (median: 17) and followed up to 6u2003months postpartum. The median age was 23 (range: 14–47) years, the median parity 2 (range: 0–11). After deworming with mebendazole (500u2003mg, single dose) of those found infected at 32u2003weeks gestation, 700 women were uninfected with Ascaris lumbricoides, 670 with Trichuris trichiura and 479 with hookworm. At delivery, 11.2%, 4.6% and 3.8% of these women were reinfected with hookworm, T. trichiura and A. lumbricoides respectively. The reinfection rate for hookworm was 14.8%, for T. trichiura 6.65, and for A. lumbricoides 5.2% at 3u2003months postpartum, and 16.0, 5.9 and 9.4% at 6u2003months postpartum. There was a significant difference in hookworm intensity at delivery between geophagous and non‐geophagous women (Pu2003=u20030.03). Women who ate termite mound earth were more often and more intensely infected with hookworm at delivery than those eating other types of earth (Pu2003=u20030.07 and Pu2003=u20030.02 respectively). There were significant differences in the prevalence of A. lumbricoides between geophagous and non‐geophagous women at 3 (Pu2003=u20030.001) and at 6u2003months postpartum (Pu2003=u20030.001). Women who ate termite mound earth had a higher prevalence of A. lumbricoides, compared with those eating other kinds of earth, at delivery (Pu2003=u20030.02), 3u2003months postpartum (Pu2003=u20030.001) and at 6u2003months postpartum (Pu2003=u20030.001). The intensity of infections with T. trichiura at 6u2003months postpartum was significantly different between geophagous and non‐geophagous women (Pu2003=u20030.005). Our study shows that geophagy is associated with A. lumbricoides reinfection among pregnant and lactating women and that intensities built up more rapidly among geophagous women. Geophagy might be associated with reinfection with hookworm and T. trichiura, although these results were less unequivocal. These findings call for increased emphasis, in antenatal care, on the potential risks of earth‐eating, and for deworming of women after delivery.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2010

Analysis of Complex Patterns of Human Exposure and Immunity to Schistosomiasis mansoni: The Influence of Age, Sex, Ethnicity and IgE

Angela Pinot de Moira; A. J. C. Fulford; Narcis B. Kabatereine; John H. Ouma; Mark Booth; David W. Dunne

Background Numerous factors may influence Schistosoma infection intensity and prevalence within endemic communities, including exposure-related factors such as local environment and behaviour, and factors relating to susceptibility to infection such as immunology and genetics. While animal studies performed in the laboratory can be tightly controlled, human populations are highly heterogeneous, varying according to demographic characteristics, genetic background and exposure to infection. The heterogeneous nature of human water contact behaviour in particular makes it difficult to distinguish between a lack of cercarial exposure and reduced susceptibility to infection as the cause for low levels of infection in the field. Methods and Principal Findings In this study we investigate risk factors for Schistosoma mansoni infection in a rural Ugandan fishing community receiving treatment as part of a multi-disciplinary longitudinal reinfection study. More specifically, we examine the influence that age, sex and ethnic background have on susceptibility to reinfection after anti-helminth drug treatment, but use individual estimates of cercarial exposure and multivariable methods in an attempt to remove noise created by environmental and behavioural heterogeneities. We then investigate whether schistosome-specific IgE immune responses could account for any remaining variations in susceptibility to reinfection. Our findings suggest that observed ethnic- and sex-related variations in S. mansoni reinfection were due to variations in cercarial exposure, as opposed to biological differences in susceptibility to infection. Age-related differences in reinfection were not explained by exposure, however, and appeared linked to the balance of IgE and IgG4 to the tegumental antigen SmTAL1 (formerly Sm22.6), which itself was significantly related to resistance to reinfection. Conclusions This study highlights the benefit of taking a multidisciplinary approach in complex field settings; it allows the ecology of a population to be understood and thus more robust conclusions to be made.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2004

Hepatosplenic morbidity in two neighbouring communities in Uganda with high levels of Schistosoma mansoni infection but very different durations of residence

Mark Booth; Brigitte J. Vennervald; Narcis B. Kabatereine; Francis Kazibwe; John H. Ouma; Curtis Kariuki; Eric M. Muchiri; Hilda Kadzo; Edmund Ireri; Gachuhi Kimani; Joseph K. Mwatha; David W. Dunne

Peri-portal fibrosis can be a serious sequelae of Schistosoma mansoni infection. Age or duration of exposure have been identified as important risk factors, but their relative importance cannot be easily separated. Here, we have compared two cohorts, aged 6-50 years and resident for ten years or since birth, from two neighbouring villages (Booma and Bugoigo) on the eastern shore of Lake Albert, Uganda. Parasitological measurements were similar, whereas the prevalence of peri-portal fibrosis was 5-fold higher in Booma. Data from the cohorts were pooled to assess the relative contribution of age and duration of residency on the risk of disease. Amongst adults, duration of residency was the critical risk factor--individuals aged 17-31 years resident for more 22 years had an almost 12-fold increased risk of fibrosis than those resident for less than 15 years. Height-standardised Splenic Vein Diameter (SVD), Portal Vein Diameter (PVD), Para-sternal Liver Length (PLL) and Spleen Length (SL) values were all higher in Booma, and each organometric parameter except PLL increased with the severity of fibrosis. Our results clearly demonstrate that duration of exposure is a critical risk factor for the development of peri-portal fibrosis and its sequelae in adults. This parameter should therefore be a routine measurement during epidemiological surveys of S. mansoni.


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1992

Nutritional status of children with schistosomiasis mansoni in two different areas of Machakos District, Kenya

E.L. Corbett; Anthony E. Butterworth; A. J. C. Fulford; John H. Ouma; R. F. Sturrock

A possible association between nutritional status and Schistosoma mansoni infection or morbidity was investigated by comparing anthropometric indices among 362 children from 3 primary schools in Machakos District, Kenya. Matithini was a prosperous school in an area (Kangundo) of moderate intensity of schistosome infection but low associated morbidity. A second area (Kambu) showed more severe schistosome-associated morbidity: in this area, Kitengei school was prosperous and with high intensities of schistosome infection, while Misuuni school was less prosperous and with low intensities of infection. Nutritional status was assessed by measurement and appropriate standardization of height, weight and skinfold thickness and by questionnaires concerning diet. Children in Kangundo were better nourished than those in Kambu. Within Kambu, children from Misuuni showed low mean skinfold thickness and low mean weight-for-height (wasting): this was associated with a lack of dietary variety and of intake of animal products. In contrast, those from Kitengei showed low mean height-for-age (stunting). The relationship between intensity of schistosome infection and nutritional indices, although significant, was complex and not readily interpretable. However, intensity of infection was also correlated with hepatomegaly, which was more clearly related to nutritional status. Depending on the school, children with hepatomegaly were significantly more stunted and/or wasted than those without, and had less variety in their diet. Possible reasons for the observed associations are discussed and, of various possibilities, the hypothesis is suggested that schistosome-associated morbidity leads to a subsequent nutritional defect. This hypothesis can now be tested by appropriate intervention studies.


Hydrobiologia | 2006

Ecology of Biomphalaria (Gastropoda: Planorbidae) in Lake Albert, Western Uganda : snail distributions, infection with schistosomes and temporal associations with environmental dynamics

Francis Kazibwe; B. Makanga; C. Rubaire-Akiiki; John H. Ouma; Curtis Kariuki; Narcis B. Kabatereine; Mark Booth; Brigitte J. Vennervald; R. F. Sturrock; J. R. Stothard

In Lake Albert, an ecological study was conducted, between June 2000 and May 2003, which assessed snail population dynamics, parasite infection patterns and interplay of environmental factors upon Biomphalaria. Monthly sampling surveys were conducted at 29 sites monitoring populations of Biomphalaria stanleyi and Biomphalariaxa0sudanica. Altogether, a total of 21,715 B.xa0stanleyi and 8452 B.xa0sudanica were collected during the period. Both species could be found infected with Schistosomaxa0mansoni although infection prevalence was significantly higher (p < 0.01**) in B.xa0stanleyi (4.4%) than in B.xa0sudanica (3.5%). Each species occupied slightly different aquatic niches with B.xa0stanleyi preferring deeper water habitats whilst B.xa0sudanica was found along the shoreline in shallower water. B.xa0stanleyi was more widely distributed among the sampling locations (19 sites) than B.xa0sudanica (10 sites). Of the four villages included in the study area, snails from sites near Piida and Bugoigo villages had the highest schistosome infection rates, presumably attributable to the closer proximity of people with intestinal schistosomiasis. After inspection of cross-correlation plots which identified most suitable time lags, snail density dynamics could be associated with seasonal variations inclusive of: air temperature, rainfall, lake level, water temperature, water conductivity and water pH. These temporal observations better reveal the relationship between snail populations and environmental factors, providing important information concerning the relative roles of B.xa0stanleyi and B.xa0sudanica in transmission of S.xa0mansoni and development of integrated strategies for disease control around Lake Albert.

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Eric M. Muchiri

Case Western Reserve University

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Gachuhi Kimani

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Joseph K. Mwatha

Kenya Medical Research Institute

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Hilda Kadzo

Kenyatta National Hospital

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