Abstract

Schistosome infection is a major cause of global morbidity, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. However, there is no effective vaccine for this major neglected tropical disease, and re-infection routinely occurs after chemotherapeutic treatment. Following invasion through the skin, larval schistosomula enter the circulatory system and migrate through the lung before maturing to adulthood in the mesenteric or urogenital vasculature. Eggs released from adult worms can become trapped in various tissues, with resultant inflammatory responses leading to hepato-splenic, intestinal, or urogenital disease – processes that have been extensively studied in recent years. In contrast, although lung pathology can occur in both the acute and chronic phases of schistosomiasis, the mechanisms underlying pulmonary disease are particularly poorly understood. In chronic infection, egg-mediated fibrosis and vascular destruction can lead to the formation of portosystemic shunts through which eggs can embolise to the lungs, where they can trigger granulomatous disease. Acute schistosomiasis, or Katayama syndrome, which is primarily evident in non-endemic individuals, occurs during pulmonary larval migration, maturation, and initial egg-production, often involving fever and a cough with an accompanying immune cell infiltrate into the lung. Importantly, lung migrating larvae are not just a cause of inflammation and pathology but are a key target for future vaccine design. However, vaccine efforts are hindered by a limited understanding of what constitutes a protective immune response to larvae. In this review, we explore the current understanding of pulmonary immune responses and inflammatory pathology in schistosomiasis, highlighting important unanswered questions and areas for future research.

Highlights

  • Schistosomiasis is a neglected tropical disease, with over 200 million people infected by trematodes of the Schistosoma genus – S. mansoni, S. haematobium and S. japonicum [1]

  • Circulating immune complexes during post-patent acute schistosomiasis have been shown to be positively associated with the pulmonary symptoms of cough, dyspnoea and interstitial infiltrates observed in chest radiographs [64], suggesting a potential causative link

  • Immune responses are thought to be responsible for many of the symptoms of pulmonary schistosomiasis, for example the correlation of immune complexes to cough, dyspnoea and interstitial infiltrates observed in chest radiographs in acute schistosomiasis [64]

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Summary

Introduction

Schistosomiasis is a neglected tropical disease, with over 200 million people infected by trematodes of the Schistosoma genus – S. mansoni, S. haematobium and S. japonicum [1]. Pulmonary symptoms – shortness of breath, wheezing and dry cough [13] – can begin before larvae develop to adulthood and patency (egg production), as early as 2 weeks post infection, and may be attributable to immune responses to lung migrating schistosomula [14, 15]. Since schistosome larvae migrate through the lungs early in infection [35], a deeper mechanistic understanding of pulmonary immune responses will be critical for development of vaccines [36, 37], as well as treatments against schistosomiasis associated pulmonary hypertension [38].

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