The impact of climatic risk factors on the prevalence, distribution, and severity of acute and chronic trachoma.

Journal article


Ramesh, A, Kovats, S, Haslam, D, Schmidt, E and Gilbert, CE (2013). The impact of climatic risk factors on the prevalence, distribution, and severity of acute and chronic trachoma. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases. 7 (11), p. e2513. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0002513
AuthorsRamesh, A, Kovats, S, Haslam, D, Schmidt, E and Gilbert, CE
Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Trachoma is the most common cause of infectious blindness. Hot, dry climates, dust and water scarcity are thought to be associated with the distribution of trachoma but the evidence is unclear. The aim of this study was to evaluate the epidemiological evidence regarding the extent to which climatic factors explain the current prevalence, distribution, and severity of acute and chronic trachoma. Understanding the present relationship between climate and trachoma could help inform current and future disease elimination. METHODS: A systematic review of peer-reviewed literature was conducted to identify observational studies which quantified an association between climate factors and acute or chronic trachoma and which met the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Studies that assessed the association between climate types and trachoma prevalence were also reviewed. RESULTS: Only eight of the 1751 papers retrieved met the inclusion criteria, all undertaken in Africa. Several papers reported an association between trachoma prevalence and altitude in highly endemic areas, providing some evidence of a role for temperature in the transmission of acute disease. A robust mapping study found strong evidence of an association between low rainfall and active trachoma. There is also consistent but weak evidence that the prevalence of trachoma is higher in savannah-type ecological zones. There were no studies on the effect of climate in low endemic areas, nor on the effect of dust on trachoma. CONCLUSION: Current evidence on the potential role of climate on trachoma distribution is limited, despite a wealth of anecdotal evidence. Temperature and rainfall appear to play a role in the transmission of acute trachoma, possibly mediated through reduced activity of flies at lower temperatures. Further research is needed on climate and other environmental and behavioural factors, particularly in arid and savannah areas. Many studies did not adequately control for socioeconomic or environmental confounders.

KeywordsHumans; Trachoma; Prevalence; Risk Factors; Temperature; Humans; Prevalence; Risk Factors; Temperature; Trachoma; 06 Biological Sciences; 11 Medical And Health Sciences; Tropical Medicine
Year2013
JournalPLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Journal citation7 (11), p. e2513
PublisherPublic Library of Science (PLoS)
ISSN1935-2735
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0002513
Publication dates
Print07 Nov 2013
Publication process dates
Deposited26 Feb 2018
Accepted18 Sep 2013
Accepted author manuscript
License
File Access Level
Open
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