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. 2016 Aug 5:16:370.
doi: 10.1186/s12879-016-1728-3.

A decade of intestinal protozoan epidemiology among settled immigrants in Qatar

Affiliations

A decade of intestinal protozoan epidemiology among settled immigrants in Qatar

Marawan A Abu-Madi et al. BMC Infect Dis. .

Abstract

Background: The World Health Organization estimates that about 3.5 billion people worldwide are affected by intestinal parasitic infections. Reports have already emphasized the role of immigrants in outbreaks of parasitic diseases in industrialized countries. With the mass influx of immigrants to Qatar, patent intestinal parasitic infections have been observed. Herein, the prevalence of intestinal protozoan infections was analysed in 29,286 records of subjects referred for stool examination at the Hamad Medical Corporation over the course of a decade (2005 to 2014, inclusive).

Results: Overall prevalence of combined protozoan infections was 5.93 % but there were significant temporal trends, age and sex effects and those arising from the region of origin of the subjects. The most common protozoan was Blastocystis hominis (overall prevalence 3.45 %). Giardia duodenalis, Chilomastix mesnili, Entamoeba coli, Entamoeba hartmanni, Endolimax nana, Iodamoeba butschlii, Entamoeba histolytica/dispar, Cryptosporidium sp. and a single case of Isospora were also detected. The prevalence of combined protozoan infections, G. duodenalis and the non-pathogenic amoebae all declined significantly across the decade. That of B. hominis varied between years but showed no directional trend across years and there was no evidence that prevalence of E. histolyitica/dispar changed significantly. Protozoan infections were observed among all regional groups, but prevalence was higher among subjects from the Arabian Peninsula, Africa and Asia compared to those from the Eastern Mediterranean and Qatar. Prevalence was higher among male subjects in all cases, but age-prevalence profiles differed between the taxa.

Conclusion: These results offer optimism that prevalence will continue to decline in the years ahead.

Keywords: Blastocystis hominis; Entamoeba; Giardia duodenalis; Immigrants; Long-term residents; Non-pathogenic amoebae; Protozoa; Qatar.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Temporal changes in the prevalence of combined protozoan infections and for specified taxa in the study population (a), and of combined protozoan infections among the five regional subsets of the population. Error bars in B, are shown only for the Qatari population so as not to obscure the temporal trends. Sample sizes in A are 29,286 for all taxa and in b, Arabian Peninsula = 1441; E. Mediterranean =2799; Africa = 5354; Asia = 10,335 and Qatar =9357
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Age-prevalence profile for all four tax and for combined protozoan infections. The sample sizes for age classes 1–13 were n = 1867, 2473, 3891, 2769, 1224, 777, 3968, 3921, 3264, 2318, 1483, 918 and 413 respectively
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Age-prevalence profiles for male and females subjects. a combined protozoan infections; b G. duodenalis and c non-pathogenic amoebae. The sample sizes for male subjects in age classes 1–13 were n = 1040, 1360, 2129, 1419, 668, 344, 2594, 2509, 2061, 1428, 763, 466 and 210 respectively and for female subjects n = 827, 1113, 1762, 1350, 556, 433, 1374, 1412, 1203, 890, 720, 452 and 203 respectively

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