Abstract

The specific roles of parasite characteristics and immunological factors of the host in Chagas disease progression and prognosis are still under debate. Trypanosoma cruzi genotype may be an important determinant of the clinical chronic Chagas disease form and prognosis. This study aimed to identify the potential association between T. cruzi genotypes and the clinical presentations of chronic Chagas disease. This is a retrospective study using T. cruzi isolated from blood culture samples of 43 patients with chronic Chagas disease. From 43 patients, 42 were born in Brazil, mainly in Southeast and Northeast Brazilian regions, and one patient was born in Bolivia. Their mean age at the time of blood collection was 52.4±13.2 years. The clinical presentation was as follows 51.1% cardiac form, 25.6% indeterminate form, and 23.3% cardiodigestive form. Discrete typing unit (DTU) was determined by multilocus conventional PCR. TcII (n = 40) and TcVI (n = 2) were the DTUs identified. DTU was unidentifiable in one patient. The average follow-up time after blood culture was 5.7±4.4 years. A total of 14 patients (32.5%) died and one patient underwent heart transplantation. The cause of death was sudden cardiac arrest in six patients, heart failure in five patients, not related to Chagas disease in one patient, and ignored in two patients. A total of 8 patients (18.6%) progressed, all of them within the cardiac or cardiodigestive forms. TcII was the main T. cruzi DTU identified in chronic Chagas disease Brazilian patients (92.9%) with either cardiac, indeterminate or cardiodigestive forms, born at Southeast and Northeast regions. Other DTU found in much less frequency was TcVI (4.8%). TcII was also associated to patients that evolved with heart failure or sudden cardiac arrest, the two most common and ominous consequences of the cardiac form of Chagas disease.

Highlights

  • Chagas disease (CD) is one of the tropical neglected diseases recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO) and has a great public health and socioeconomic burden in endemic countries [1]

  • We describe the T. cruzi Discrete typing unit (DTU) genotypes of blood culture isolates obtained from 43 patients followed at our outpatient clinic in order to correlate the DTU with the clinical presentation and the place of birth

  • All participants who Trypanosoma cruzi genotype TcII and chronic Chagas disease clinical presentation were still followed at our institution were approached during their regular medical appointments and provided written informed consent allowing the use of their blood culture samples and granting access to their medical records

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Summary

Introduction

Chagas disease (CD) is one of the tropical neglected diseases recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO) and has a great public health and socioeconomic burden in endemic countries [1]. Any T. cruzi lineage can infect humans, TcI, TcII, TcV, and TcVI are the DTUs mostly associated to human infections in domicile cycles transmission in endemic areas [9, 10]. In Brazil, TcII and TcVI are the T. cruzi DTUs most frequently identified in human infections [11,12,13,14]. The specific roles of parasite characteristics and immunological factors of the host in Chagas disease progression and prognosis are still under debate. Trypanosoma cruzi genotype may be an important determinant of the clinical chronic Chagas disease form and prognosis. This study aimed to identify the potential association between T. cruzi genotypes and the clinical presentations of chronic Chagas disease.

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