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. 2024 Jun;291(2024):20240449.
doi: 10.1098/rspb.2024.0449. Epub 2024 Jun 12.

The short-term impact of Schistosoma mansoni infection on health-related quality of life: implications for current elimination policies

Affiliations

The short-term impact of Schistosoma mansoni infection on health-related quality of life: implications for current elimination policies

Sergi Alonso et al. Proc Biol Sci. 2024 Jun.

Abstract

The WHO aims to eliminate schistosomiasis as a public health problem by 2030. However, standard morbidity measures poorly correlate to infection intensities, hindering disease monitoring and evaluation. This is exacerbated by insufficient evidence on Schistosoma's impact on health-related quality of life (HRQoL). We conducted community-based cross-sectional surveys and parasitological examinations in moderate-to-high Schistosoma mansoni endemic communities in Uganda. We calculated parasitic infections and used EQ-5D instruments to estimate and compare HRQoL utilities in these populations. We further employed Tobit/linear regression models to predict HRQoL determinants. Two-thirds of the 560 participants were diagnosed with parasitic infection(s), 49% having S. mansoni. No significant negative association was observed between HRQoL and S. mansoni infection status/intensity. However, severity of pain urinating (β = -0.106; s.e. = 0.043) and body swelling (β = -0.326; s.e. = 0.005), increasing age (β = -0.016; s.e. = 0.033), reduced socio-economic status (β = 0.128; s.e. = 0.032), and being unemployed predicted lower HRQoL. Symptom severity and socio-economic status were better predictors of short-term HRQoL than current S. mansoni infection status/intensity. This is key to disentangling the link between infection(s) and short-term health outcomes, and highlights the complexity of correlating current infection(s) with long-term morbidity. Further evidence is needed on long-term schistosomiasis-associated HRQoL, health and economic outcomes to inform the case for upfront investments in schistosomiasis interventions.

Keywords: EQ-5D; Schistosoma mansoni; Uganda; health-related quality of life; neglected tropical disease; schistosomiasis.

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Conflict of interest statement

We declare we have no competing interests.

Figures

Diagram of participants recruited and human samples obtained for this study.
Figure 1.
Diagram of participants recruited and human samples obtained for this study. Data were collected in Tororo in December 2021 and in Mayuge in May 2022.
EQ-5D-5L responses by dimension (%).
Figure 2.
EQ-5D-5L responses by dimension (%). Responses of the 560 participants to the EQ-5D-5L instrument were classified by dimension. For each dimension, participants reported experiencing any problem according to five levels: (1) no problems; (2) slight problems; (3) moderate problems; (4) severe problems; or (5) extreme problems.

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