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PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2008

Impact of Environment and Social Gradient on Leptospira Infection in Urban Slums

Renato Barbosa Reis; Guilherme S. Ribeiro; Ridalva Dias Martins Felzemburgh; Francisco S. Santana; Sharif Mohr; Astrid X. T. O. Melendez; Adriano Queiroz; Andréia C. Santos; Romy R. Ravines; Wagner Tassinari; Marilia Sá Carvalho; Mitermayer G. Reis; Albert I. Ko

Background Leptospirosis has become an urban health problem as slum settlements have expanded worldwide. Efforts to identify interventions for urban leptospirosis have been hampered by the lack of population-based information on Leptospira transmission determinants. The aim of the study was to estimate the prevalence of Leptospira infection and identify risk factors for infection in the urban slum setting. Methods and Findings We performed a community-based survey of 3,171 slum residents from Salvador, Brazil. Leptospira agglutinating antibodies were measured as a marker for prior infection. Poisson regression models evaluated the association between the presence of Leptospira antibodies and environmental attributes obtained from Geographical Information System surveys and indicators of socioeconomic status and exposures for individuals. Overall prevalence of Leptospira antibodies was 15.4% (95% confidence interval [CI], 14.0–16.8). Households of subjects with Leptospira antibodies clustered in squatter areas at the bottom of valleys. The risk of acquiring Leptospira antibodies was associated with household environmental factors such as residence in flood-risk regions with open sewers (prevalence ratio [PR] 1.42, 95% CI 1.14–1.75) and proximity to accumulated refuse (1.43, 1.04–1.88), sighting rats (1.32, 1.10–1.58), and the presence of chickens (1.26, 1.05–1.51). Furthermore, low income and black race (1.25, 1.03–1.50) were independent risk factors. An increase of US


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2014

Prospective Study of Leptospirosis Transmission in an Urban Slum Community: Role of Poor Environment in Repeated Exposures to the Leptospira Agent

Ridalva Dias Martins Felzemburgh; Guilherme S. Ribeiro; Federico Costa; Renato Barbosa Reis; José E. Hagan; Astrid X. T. O. Melendez; Deborah Bittencourt Mothé Fraga; Francisco S. Santana; Sharif Mohr; Balbino L. dos Santos; Adriano Q. Silva; Andréia C. Santos; Romy R. Ravines; Wagner Tassinari; Marilia Sá Carvalho; Mitermayer G. Reis; Albert I. Ko

1 per day in per capita household income was associated with an 11% (95% CI 5%–18%) decrease in infection risk. Conclusions Deficiencies in the sanitation infrastructure where slum inhabitants reside were found to be environmental sources of Leptospira transmission. Even after controlling for environmental factors, differences in socioeconomic status contributed to the risk of Leptospira infection, indicating that effective prevention of leptospirosis may need to address the social factors that produce unequal health outcomes among slum residents, in addition to improving sanitation.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2008

Detection and modelling of case clusters for urban leptospirosis

Wagner Tassinari; Débora da Cruz Payão Pellegrini; Claudio B. P. Sá; Renato Barbosa Reis; Albert I. Ko; Marilia Sá Carvalho

Background Leptospirosis has emerged as an urban health problem as slum settlements have rapidly spread worldwide and created conditions for rat-borne transmission. Prospective studies have not been performed to determine the disease burden, identify risk factors for infection and provide information needed to guide interventions in these marginalized communities. Methodology/Principal Findings We enrolled and followed a cohort of 2,003 residents from a slum community in the city of Salvador, Brazil. Baseline and one-year serosurveys were performed to identify primary and secondary Leptospira infections, defined as respectively, seroconversion and four-fold rise in microscopic agglutination titers. We used multinomial logistic regression models to evaluate risk exposures for acquiring primary and secondary infection. A total of 51 Leptospira infections were identified among 1,585 (79%) participants who completed the one-year follow-up protocol. The crude infection rate was 37.8 per 1,000 person-years. The secondary infection rate was 2.3 times higher than that of primary infection rate (71.7 and 31.1 infections per 1,000 person-years, respectively). Male gender (OR 2.88; 95% CI 1.40–5.91) and lower per capita household income (OR 0.54; 95% CI, 0.30–0.98 for an increase of


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2016

Spatiotemporal Determinants of Urban Leptospirosis Transmission: Four-Year Prospective Cohort Study of Slum Residents in Brazil

José E. Hagan; Paula Moraga; Federico Costa; Nicolas Capian; Guilherme S. Ribeiro; Elsio A. Wunder; Ridalva Dias Martins Felzemburgh; Renato Barbosa Reis; Nivison Nery; Francisco S. Santana; Deborah Bittencourt Mothé Fraga; Balbino L. dos Santos; Andréia C. Santos; Adriano Queiroz; Wagner Tassinari; Marilia Sá Carvalho; Mitermayer G. Reis; Peter J. Diggle; Albert I. Ko

1 per person per day) were independent risk factors for primary infection. In contrast, the 15–34 year age group (OR 10.82, 95% CI 1.38–85.08), and proximity of residence to an open sewer (OR 0.95; 0.91–0.99 for an increase of 1 m distance) were significant risk factors for secondary infection. Conclusions/Significance This study found that slum residents had high risk (>3% per year) for acquiring a Leptospira infection. Re-infection is a frequent event and occurs in regions of slum settlements that are in proximity to open sewers. Effective prevention of leptospirosis will therefore require interventions that address the infrastructure deficiencies that contribute to repeated exposures among slum inhabitants.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2014

Influence of household rat infestation on leptospira transmission in the urban slum environment.

Federico Costa; Guilherme S. Ribeiro; Ridalva Dias Martins Felzemburgh; Norlan de Jesus Santos; Renato Barbosa Reis; Andréia C. Santos; Deborah Bittencourt Mothé Fraga; Wildo Navegantes de Araújo; Carlos Santana; James E. Childs; Mitermayer G. Reis; Albert I. Ko

Objective  To analyse the epidemiological profile of 488 cases of leptospirosis in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil between 1997 and 2002, using a variety of methods of spatial epidemiology, to establish alert guidelines in general hospitals, which might be a tool to improve diagnosis and treatment of leptospirosis to reduce lethality rates.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2013

Knowledge, attitudes, and practices related to Leptospirosis among urban slum residents in Brazil.

Wildo Navegantes de Araújo; Brooke Finkmoore; Guilherme S. Ribeiro; Renato Barbosa Reis; Ridalva Dias Martins Felzemburgh; José E. Hagan; Mitermayer G. Reis; Albert I. Ko; Federico Costa

Background Rat-borne leptospirosis is an emerging zoonotic disease in urban slum settlements for which there are no adequate control measures. The challenge in elucidating risk factors and informing approaches for prevention is the complex and heterogeneous environment within slums, which vary at fine spatial scales and influence transmission of the bacterial agent. Methodology/Principal Findings We performed a prospective study of 2,003 slum residents in the city of Salvador, Brazil during a four-year period (2003–2007) and used a spatiotemporal modelling approach to delineate the dynamics of leptospiral transmission. Household interviews and Geographical Information System surveys were performed annually to evaluate risk exposures and environmental transmission sources. We completed annual serosurveys to ascertain leptospiral infection based on serological evidence. Among the 1,730 (86%) individuals who completed at least one year of follow-up, the infection rate was 35.4 (95% CI, 30.7–40.6) per 1,000 annual follow-up events. Male gender, illiteracy, and age were independently associated with infection risk. Environmental risk factors included rat infestation (OR 1.46, 95% CI, 1.00–2.16), contact with mud (OR 1.57, 95% CI 1.17–2.17) and lower household elevation (OR 0.92 per 10m increase in elevation, 95% CI 0.82–1.04). The spatial distribution of infection risk was highly heterogeneous and varied across small scales. Fixed effects in the spatiotemporal model accounted for the majority of the spatial variation in risk, but there was a significant residual component that was best explained by the spatial random effect. Although infection risk varied between years, the spatial distribution of risk associated with fixed and random effects did not vary temporally. Specific “hot-spots” consistently had higher transmission risk during study years. Conclusions/Significance The risk for leptospiral infection in urban slums is determined in large part by structural features, both social and environmental. Our findings indicate that topographic factors such as household elevation and inadequate drainage increase risk by promoting contact with mud and suggest that the soil-water interface serves as the environmental reservoir for spillover transmission. The use of a spatiotemporal approach allowed the identification of geographic outliers with unexplained risk patterns. This approach, in addition to guiding targeted community-based interventions and identifying new hypotheses, may have general applicability towards addressing environmentally-transmitted diseases that have emerged in complex urban slum settings.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

Frequent House Invasion of Trypanosoma cruzi-Infected Triatomines in a Suburban Area of Brazil

Gilmar Ribeiro; Rodrigo Gurgel-Gonçalves; Renato Barbosa Reis; Carlos Gustavo Silva dos Santos; Alekhine Amorim; Sonia G. Andrade; Mitermayer G. Reis

Background The Norway rat (Rattus norvegicus) is the principal reservoir for leptospirosis in many urban settings. Few studies have identified markers for rat infestation in slum environments while none have evaluated the association between household rat infestation and Leptospira infection in humans or the use of infestation markers as a predictive model to stratify risk for leptospirosis. Methodology/Principal Findings We enrolled a cohort of 2,003 urban slum residents from Salvador, Brazil in 2004, and followed the cohort during four annual serosurveys to identify serologic evidence for Leptospira infection. In 2007, we performed rodent infestation and environmental surveys of 80 case households, in which resided at least one individual with Leptospira infection, and 109 control households. In the case-control study, signs of rodent infestation were identified in 78% and 42% of the households, respectively. Regression modeling identified the presence of R. norvegicus feces (OR, 4.95; 95% CI, 2.13–11.47), rodent burrows (2.80; 1.06–7.36), access to water (2.79; 1.28–6.09), and un-plastered walls (2.71; 1.21–6.04) as independent risk factors associated with Leptospira infection in a household. We developed a predictive model for infection, based on assigning scores to each of the rodent infestation risk factors. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis found that the prediction score produced a good/excellent fit based on an area under the curve of 0.78 (0.71–0.84). Conclusions/Significance Our study found that a high proportion of slum households were infested with R. norvegicus and that rat infestation was significantly associated with the risk of Leptospira infection, indicating that high level transmission occurs among slum households. We developed an easily applicable prediction score based on rat infestation markers, which identified households with highest infection risk. The use of the prediction score in community-based screening may therefore be an effective risk stratification strategy for targeting control measures in slum settings of high leptospirosis transmission.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 2011

Espacialização da leptospirose em Aracaju, Estado de Sergipe, no período de 2001 a 2007

clenio bezerra melo; Renato Barbosa Reis; Albert Icsang Ko; Carmélia Nóia Barreto; Andréa Prudente Lima; Ângela Maria da Silva

Leptospirosis disproportionately affects residents of urban slums. To understand the knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding leptospirosis, we conducted a cross-sectional study among residents of an urban slum community in Salvador, Brazil. Of the 257 residents who were interviewed, 225 (90%) were aware of leptospirosis and more than two-thirds of respondents correctly identified the modes of disease transmission and ways to reduce exposure. However, study participants who performed risk activities such as cleaning open sewers had limited access to protective clothing such as boots (33%) or gloves (35%). Almost all respondents performed at least one activity to prevent household rat infestation, which often included use of an illegal poison. Our findings support the need for interventions targeted at the individual and household levels to reduce risk of leptospirosis until large-scale structural interventions are available to residents of urban slum communities.


Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2011

Análises espaciais na identificação das áreas de risco para a esquistossomose mansônica no município de Lauro de Freitas, Bahia, Brasil

Luciana Lobato Cardim; Antonio Sergio Ferraudo; Selma Turrioni Azevedo Pacheco; Renato Barbosa Reis; Marta Mariana Nascimento Silva; Deborah Daniela Madureira Trabuco Carneiro; Maria Emília Bavia

Background The demographic transition of populations from rural areas to large urban centers often results in a disordered occupation of forest remnants and increased economic pressure to develop high-income buildings in these areas. Ecological and socioeconomic factors associated with these urban transitions create conditions for the potential transmission of infectious diseases, which was demonstrated for Chagas disease. Methodology/Principal Findings We analyzed 930 triatomines, mainly Triatoma tibiamaculata, collected in artificial and sylvatic environments (forests near houses) of a suburban area of the city of Salvador, Bahia State, Brazil between 2007 and 2011. Most triatomines were captured at peridomiciles. Adult bugs predominated in all studied environments, and nymphs were scarce inside houses. Molecular analyses of a randomly selected sub-sample (n=212) of triatomines showed Trypanosoma cruzi infection rates of 65%, 50% and 56% in intradomestic, peridomestic and sylvatic environments, respectively. We detected the T. cruzi lineages I and II and mixed infections. We also showed that T. tibiamaculata fed on blood from birds (50%), marsupials (38%), ruminants (7%) and rodents (5%). The probability of T. cruzi infection was higher in triatomines that fed on marsupial blood (odds ratio (OR) = 1.95, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.22-3.11). Moreover, we observed a protective effect against infection in bugs that fed on bird blood (OR = 0.43, 95% CI = 0.30-0.73). Conclusions/Significance The frequent invasion of houses by infected triatomines indicates a potential risk of T. cruzi transmission to inhabitants in this area. Our results reinforce that continuous epidemiological surveillance should be performed in areas where domestic transmission is controlled but enzootic transmission persists.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

The Relative Contribution of Immigration or Local Increase for Persistence of Urban Schistosomiasis in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil

Ronald E. Blanton; Lúcio úM Barbosa; Eliana A. G. Reis; Theomira Mauadie Azevedo Carmo; Cláudio áR A dos Santos; Jackson Maurício Lopes Costa; Peace T. Aminu; Walter A. Blank; Renato Barbosa Reis; Isabel C. Guimarães; Luciano Kalabric Silva; Mitermayer G. Reis

Introduction: Leptospirosis, a disease caused by pathogenic spirochetes of the genus Leptospira, is one of the most widespread zoonoses in the world and is considered an important public health problem. This paper aims to describe the spatial pattern of leptospirosis in the city of Aracaju from 2001 to 2007 in an effort to identify areas at risk for leptospirosis. Methods: We used the ratio of Kernel, which represents the ratio between two surfaces, to visualize the surface of disease risk. The numerator corresponds to the number of cases geocoded to the census tract, and the denominator of the kernel corresponds to the population of these areas. Using this method, the areas with the highest density of cases were delineated and compared visually with socioeconomic factors, such as average income. Results: The spatial pattern was different in periods of rain compared with periods of drought and did not coincide with the areas considered most at risk for the disease. This study revealed the importance of applying spatial analysis techniques in the field of public health. Conclusions: These findings indicate that the kernel is a useful tool for obtaining a comprehensive review of the epidemiology of leptospirosis in Aracaju, which supports the kernel’s use by the municipal health departments and by the state.

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Federico Costa

Federal University of Bahia

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