TY - JOUR
T1 - A review of the global burden, novel diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccine targets for cryptosporidium
AU - Checkley, William
AU - White, A. Clinton
AU - Jaganath, Devan
AU - Arrowood, Michael J.
AU - Chalmers, Rachel M.
AU - Chen, Xian Ming
AU - Fayer, Ronald
AU - Griffiths, Jeffrey K.
AU - Guerrant, Richard L.
AU - Hedstrom, Lizbeth
AU - Huston, Christopher D.
AU - Kotloff, Karen L.
AU - Kang, Gagandeep
AU - Mead, Jan R.
AU - Miller, Mark
AU - Petri, William A.
AU - Priest, Jeffrey W.
AU - Roos, David S.
AU - Striepen, Boris
AU - Thompson, R. C.Andrew
AU - Ward, Honorine D.
AU - Van Voorhis, Wesley A.
AU - Xiao, Lihua
AU - Zhu, Guan
AU - Houpt, Eric R.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2015/1/1
Y1 - 2015/1/1
N2 - Cryptosporidium spp are well recognised as causes of diarrhoeal disease during waterborne epidemics and in immunocompromised hosts. Studies have also drawn attention to an underestimated global burden and suggest major gaps in optimum diagnosis, treatment, and immunisation. Cryptosporidiosis is increasingly identified as an important cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Studies in low-resource settings and high-income countries have confirmed the importance of cryptosporidium as a cause of diarrhoea and childhood malnutrition. Diagnostic tests for cryptosporidium infection are suboptimum, necessitating specialised tests that are often insensitive. Antigen-detection and PCR improve sensitivity, and multiplexed antigen detection and molecular assays are underused. Therapy has some effect in healthy hosts and no proven efficacy in patients with AIDS. Use of cryptosporidium genomes has helped to identify promising therapeutic targets, and drugs are in development, but methods to assess the efficacy in vitro and in animals are not well standardised. Partial immunity after exposure suggests the potential for successful vaccines, and several are in development; however, surrogates of protection are not well defined. Improved methods for propagation and genetic manipulation of the organism would be significant advances.
AB - Cryptosporidium spp are well recognised as causes of diarrhoeal disease during waterborne epidemics and in immunocompromised hosts. Studies have also drawn attention to an underestimated global burden and suggest major gaps in optimum diagnosis, treatment, and immunisation. Cryptosporidiosis is increasingly identified as an important cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Studies in low-resource settings and high-income countries have confirmed the importance of cryptosporidium as a cause of diarrhoea and childhood malnutrition. Diagnostic tests for cryptosporidium infection are suboptimum, necessitating specialised tests that are often insensitive. Antigen-detection and PCR improve sensitivity, and multiplexed antigen detection and molecular assays are underused. Therapy has some effect in healthy hosts and no proven efficacy in patients with AIDS. Use of cryptosporidium genomes has helped to identify promising therapeutic targets, and drugs are in development, but methods to assess the efficacy in vitro and in animals are not well standardised. Partial immunity after exposure suggests the potential for successful vaccines, and several are in development; however, surrogates of protection are not well defined. Improved methods for propagation and genetic manipulation of the organism would be significant advances.
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U2 - 10.1016/S1473-3099(14)70772-8
DO - 10.1016/S1473-3099(14)70772-8
M3 - Review article
C2 - 25278220
AN - SCOPUS:84918574823
SN - 1473-3099
VL - 15
SP - 85
EP - 94
JO - The Lancet Infectious Diseases
JF - The Lancet Infectious Diseases
IS - 1
ER -