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Volume 13, Number 10–October 2007

Letter

Alveolar Echinococcosis, Lithuania

Rasa Bružinskaitė,* Audronė Marcinkutė,† Kęstutis Strupas,‡ Vitalijus Sokolovas,‡ Peter Deplazes,§ Alexander Mathis,§ Carlos Eddi,# and Mindaugas Šarkūnas* Comments to Author
*Lithuanian Veterinary Academy, Kaunas, Lithuania; †University Hospital of Tuberculosis and Infectious Diseases, Vilnius, Lithuania; ‡Santariškių Clinic, Vilnius, Lithuania; §Institute of Parasitology, Zürich, Switzerland; and #Food and Agriculture Organization, Rome, Italy

Suggested citation for this article

To the Editor: Alveolar echinococcosis (AE), a serious zoonosis caused by the tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis, has been reported in neighboring countries of Lithuania in recent years (1–4), but no published epidemiologic information is available. The red fox (Vulpes vulpes), the main definitive host of E. multilocularis in Europe (1), and important intermediate rodent hosts (e.g. Arvicola terrestris, Microtus arvalis) are present in Lithuania (5), but to date they have not been investigated systematically. The helminth fauna of carnivores in Lithuania had been investigated in a study in 1976, but no record was made for E. multilocularis (6). Notably, E. multilocularis has recently been identified in 1 of 5 muskrats (Ondatra zibethicus) captured in the Šilutė district of Lithuania (7). The objectives of our study were to estimate the prevalence of E. multilocularis in definitive hosts and to gather first information concerning AE in humans in Lithuania.

Figure
Figure.

Figure. Number of patients (shown in boldface) diagnosed with human alveolar echinococcosis at the Hospital of Tuberculosis and Infectious Diseases, Vilnius University...

From 1997 to July 2006, 80 AE cases have been diagnosed at the reference hospital for AE, the Hospital of Tuberculosis and Infectious Diseases in cooperation with the Santariškių Clinic, Vilnius University. Diagnoses were based on serologic testing using ELISA (Bordier Affinity, Crissier, Switzerland) and Western blot (LDBIO, Lyon, France) or imaging methods (ultrasound scan, computed tomography). In 6.7% of the cases identified by imaging techniques, serum antibodies were not detected by ELISA. Diagnoses in all cases were confirmed by histopathologic examination or typical liver lesion morphologic features. Most of the cases were registered in the past 5 years (10–16 cases/year in 2002–July 2006 compared with 0–4 cases/year in 1997–2001). In 26 (33%) of 80 patients, metacestodes were found in the bilateral liver lobes; in 20 (25%) metacestodes were found in the right lobe. Metacestodes had also spread into extra hepatic tissues and metastasized to the right lung, right kidney, spleen, and genitals in 18 (23%) of the patients. AE was diagnosed in 62 (78%) of patients in the third to fourth clinical stage of the disease, according to the PNM (P, parasitic mass in the liver; N, involvement of neighboring organs; M, metastasis) classification: P2-3N0-1M0, P4N1M1 (8); twelve (15%) patients died, 7 of them within 4–24 months after diagnosis. The patients' ages varied from 21 to 83 years (mean age 58 years). Women were more frequently infected (63%) than men (38%), which could be explained by women's more frequent involvement in gardening. Eighty-one percent of AE patients were farmers or persons involved in agricultural activities. Most AE patients originated in the northwestern and northeastern parts of Lithuania, but cases were recorded from many parts of the country (Figure), which suggests that the whole territory of Lithuania should be considered as an AE-endemic area.

To assess the prevalence of E. multilocularis in definitive hosts, the small intestines of 206 hunted red foxes were collected from randomly selected districts from October 2001 to April 2004 and examined following strict safety precautions by the sedimentation and counting technique. E. multilocularis was detected in 118 red foxes (57.3%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 50.2%–64.1%). The tapeworm was present in foxes from most tested localities; the highest prevalence of 62.3% (CI 49.0–74.4%) was observed in the Kaunas district (Figure). The median worm burden per infected fox was 56 (1–20, 924) in this district. The high prevalences of E. multilocularis in foxes in the examined areas support the hypothesis that foxes play the key role as definitive hosts in the biology of this tapeworm in Lithuania.

In the framework of an epidemiologic investigation on E. granulosus, the contents of small necrotic lesions (size 3–8 mm) found in 21 randomly collected pig livers from small family farms in the southwestern part of Lithuania were also investigated by PCR (9); 3 lesions were positive for AE. Further, 2 of 34 dogs from rural areas in the southwestern part of Lithuania shed taeniid eggs in feces that were positive for E. multilocularis on examination with a multiplex PCR (10).

The high number of human AE cases and the high prevalence of E. multilocularis in definitive wild hosts document that AE is of emerging concern in Lithuania. However, this study cannot conclusively document a recent extension of the parasite's range and an increase of the infection pressure. Clearly, the identification of AE in pigs and of E. multilocularis in dogs from small family farms demonstrates that transmission of E. multilocularis occurs in rural environments in close proximity to the population.

Acknowledgments

We thank Regina Virbalienė, Jolanta Žiliukienė, and Jonas Valantinas for valuable assistance in diagnosing human echinococcosis.

This study was financially supported by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO, project TCP/LIT/ 3001 (T)), the SwissBaltNet (supporter: Gebert Rüf Stiftung), Lithuanian Veterinary Academy, Hospital of Tuberculosis and Infectious Diseases, and Santariškių Clinic of Vilnius University.

References

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  2. Malczewski A, Rocki B, Ramisz A, Eckert J. Echinococcus multilocularis (Cestoda), the causative agent of alveolar echinococcosis in humans: first record in Poland. J Parasitol. 1995;81:318–21.
  3. Shimalov VV, Shimalov VT. Helminth fauna of red fox (Vulpes vulpes Linnaeus, 1758) in southern Belarus. Parasitol Res. 2003;89:77–8.
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  5. Prūsaitė J, Mažeikytė R, Pauža D, Paužienė N, Baleišis R, Juškaitis R, et al. Fauna of Lithuania [in Lithuanian]. Vilinius (Lithuania): Mokslas Publishers; 1988.
  6. Kazlauskas J, Prūsaitė J. Helminths of carnivores in Lithuania [in Russian]. Acta Parasitol Lituan. 1976;12:33–40.
  7. Mažeika V, Paulauskas A, Balčiauskas L. New data on the helminth fauna of rodents of Lithuania. Acta Zool Lituan. 2003;13:41–7.
  8. Kern P, Wen H, Sato N, Vuitton DA, Gruener B, Shao Y, et al. WHO classification of alveolar echinococcosis: principles and application. Parasitol Int. 2006;55:83–7.
  9. Stieger C, Hegglin D, Schwarzenbach G, Mathis A, Deplazes P. Spatial and temporal aspects of urban transmission of Echinococcus multilocularis. Parasitology. 2002;124:631–40.
  10. Trachsel D, Deplazes P, Mathis A. Identification of taeniid eggs in the faeces of carnivores based on multiplex PCR using targets in mitochondrial DNA. Parasitology. 2007; 2007;134:911–20.

Figure

Figure. Number of patients (shown in boldface) diagnosed with human alveolar echinococcosis at the Hospital of Tuberculosis and Infectious Diseases, Vilnius University...

Suggested Citation for this Article

Bružinskaitė R, Marcinkutė A, Strupas K, Sokolovas V, Deplazes P, Mathis A, et al. Alveolar echninoccoccosis, Lithuania [letter]. Emerg Infect Dis [serial on the Internet]. 2007 Oct [date cited]. Available from http://www.cdc.gov/EID/content/13/10/1618.htm

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Mindaugas Šarkūnas, Department of Infectious Diseases, Lithuanian Veterinary Academy, Tilžės str. 18, LT–47181, Kaunas, Lithuania; email: minsar@lva.lt

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This page posted September 28, 2007
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