Hookworm
Hookworm
Hookworm
review article
current concepts
Hookworm Infection
Peter J. Hotez, M.D., Ph.D., Simon Brooker, D.Phil., Jeffrey M. Bethony, Ph.D.,
Maria Elena Bottazzi, Ph.D., Alex Loukas, Ph.D., and Shuhua Xiao, M.D.
clinical disease
The major hookworm-related injury in humans
occurs when the adult parasites cause intestinal
blood loss.14-16 The term “hookworm disease” re-
fers primarily to the iron-deficiency anemia that re-
sults from moderate or heavy infection. Blood loss
occurs when the worms use their cutting apparatus
to attach themselves to the intestinal mucosa and
submucosa and contract their muscular esophagi
to create negative pressure, which sucks a plug of
tissue into their buccal capsules (Fig. 3). Capillar-
ies and arterioles are ruptured not only mechani-
cally but also chemically, through the action of hy-
drolytic enzymes.14 To ensure blood flow, the adult
hookworms release anticlotting agents.17,18 (One
Figure 1. Cutaneous Larva Migrans Caused
by Ancylostoma braziliense.
of these, a novel factor VIIa/tissue factor inhibitor,
Reprinted from Despommier et al.,8 with the permission
is being developed as a therapeutic agent to block
of the publisher. the coagulopathy of fulminant infection with Ebola
virus.19) The hookworm ingests a portion of the
extravasated blood. Some red cells undergo lysis,
thereby releasing hemoglobin, which is digested by
the abdomen in 16 percent; in the remainder of cas- a cascade of hemoglobinases that line the gut of
es, the burrows appear predominantly in the lower the parasite.20
legs, arms, and face.9 In the United States, cutane- The major clinical manifestations of hookworm
ous larva migrans is seen commonly in military per- disease are the consequences of chronic intestinal
sonnel, in travelers returning from resorts that have blood loss. Iron-deficiency anemia occurs and hy-
sandy beaches, and in residents of Florida and the poalbuminemia develops when blood loss exceeds
Gulf Coast; it is treated successfully with short oral the intake and reserves of host iron and protein.15
courses of either albendazole or ivermectin.10,11 Depending on the status of host iron, a hookworm
While in the soil, third-stage larvae are in a state burden (i.e., the intensity of infection, or number
of developmental arrest; development resumes af- of worms per person) of 40 to 160 worms is asso-
ter the larvae enter the human host.12 In humans, ciated with hemoglobin levels below 11 g per deci-
entry through the skin is followed within 10 days liter.21,22 However, other studies have shown that
by larval migration to the lungs (Fig. 2), resulting anemia may occur with a lighter hookworm bur-
in cough and sore throat. Pulmonary hookworm in- den.23 Because infection with A. duodenale causes
fection resembles Löffler’s syndrome because of its greater blood loss than does infection with N. amer-
association with eosinophilia in the lung. In rare icanus, the degree of iron-deficiency anemia induced
cases, pneumonitis accompanies cutaneous larva by hookworms depends on the species.16 For in-
migrans. Hookworm pneumonitis is usually not stance, in Zanzibar, among children who were in-
severe, although it may last for more than a month, fected only with N. americanus hookworms, the prev-
until the larvae leave the lungs and enter the gastro- alence of hypoferritinemia (ferritin level, <12 µg per
intestinal tract. It is not commonly recognized that liter) was 33.1 percent, whereas in children who
A. duodenale third-stage larvae infect humans both were also infected with A. duodenale hookworms, the
by the oral route and through the skin. When infec- prevalence was 58.9 percent.24 When iron stores in
tion with A. duodenale occurs by the oral route, the the host become depleted, there is a direct correla-
early migrations of third-stage larvae cause a syn- tion between the intensity of hookworm infection
drome known as Wakana disease, which is charac- (typically measured by quantitative egg counts) and
10.0 9.9
rum malaria. Since much of the morbidity associat-
9.8
ed with both diseases results from anemia,14,15,43
9.6
9.5 it is possible that hookworm disease exacerbates
9.2 malarial anemia and vice versa. A potentially prom-
9.0 ising avenue of research is the further examination
of co-endemic infections, such as hookworm infec-
0.0
0 1–1999 2000–3999 ≥4000 tion, malaria, and human immunodeficiency virus
No. of Hookworm Eggs per Gram of Feces (HIV) infection, in which morbidity is due largely
or at least in part to anemia.15,43,44
Figure 4. Relationship between the Hookworm Burden
and Anemia.
Quantitative egg counts serve as an indirect measure diagnosis in returning
of the adult-hookworm burden (i.e., the number of worms travelers and immigrants
per patient). Hemoglobin levels drop in proportion
to infection. (Data are from Albonico et al.16) The cutaneous manifestations of hookworm in-
fection must be differentiated from cercarial der-
matitis (“swimmer’s itch”) and creeping erup-
tant contributor to anemia in this age group.34,35 tion from other causes, such as gnathostomiasis,
Hookworm infection in children may reduce school strongyloidiasis, and infection with fly larvae. The
attendance, with subsequent effects on productivi- pulmonary manifestations are usually not specific
ty and wage-earning potential in adulthood.4,29 enough to link them specifically to hookworm. Per-
Hookworm infection is considered a major sistent eosinophilia in refugees, especially those
health threat to adolescent girls and women of re- from Southeast Asia, is commonly associated with
productive age, with adverse effects on the out- active hookworm infection.45 Abdominal tender-
come of pregnancy.22,36,37 The World Health Or- ness or the presence of iron-deficiency anemia in
ganization estimates that because of increased immigrants from areas where hookworm is endem-
physiological demands for iron during pregnancy ic warrants investigation for infection.27 The mi-
combined with malnutrition, more than half of croscopical examination of unconcentrated feces
the pregnant women in developing countries have is adequate to identify hookworm eggs and to di-
problems related to iron-deficiency anemia.37 Se- agnose clinically important infection. Several quan-
vere iron-deficiency anemia during pregnancy has titative techniques are available to estimate the
been linked to increased maternal mortality, im- output of hookworm eggs; these techniques are
paired lactation, and prematurity and low birth valuable for epidemiologic studies because they pro-
weight.37 An estimated 44 million pregnant wom- vide indirect measures of the worm burden. The
en are infected with hookworm worldwide, with eggs of A. duodenale and N. americanus are indistin-
7.5 million in sub-Saharan Africa alone.22,38 In guishable, although the polymerase chain reaction
1929, A.C. Chandler first pointed out that “preg- and morphologic examination of cultured third-
nancy is a powerful factor in accentuating the ef- stage larvae can differentiate the two species.46
fects of hookworm disease, or it might be more ac- Zoonotic hookworm infection does not cause egg-
curate to put it vice versa.”39 Estimates in Kenya bearing infections in humans.
and Nepal suggest that hookworm infection caus-
es 30 percent and 41 percent, respectively, of mod-
erate or severe cases of anemia among pregnant
epidemiology , treatment,
and prospects for control
women (hemoglobin level, <9 g per deciliter).15
The association between hookworm infection and overdispersion of and predisposition
anemia is greatest in multigravidas.40,41 It has been to hookworm infection
conjectured that in China and other regions where In all areas where hookworm is endemic, the varia-
A. duodenale occurs, hookworm infection during tion in the worm burden among persons who be-
schools is that school-age children have the high- Moreover, in areas where hookworm is endemic,
est intensity of ascaris, trichuris, and schistosome reinfection often occurs within just a few months
infections of any age group, and schools provide a after deworming with the use of a benzimidazole
cost-effective way to deliver anthelmintics.37,61 Ei- anthelmintic.67 In some cases, treatments are re-
ther of the benzimidazole anthelmintics can be quired three times a year to improve the iron status
administered as a single tablet to all children, re- of the host.63,68 Additional data indicate that the
gardless of their size and age. In communities where efficacy of treatment with benzimidazole anthelm-
infection is common, clinicians can offer treatment intics diminishes after periodic therapy.69 These
to all children without the need to examine each problems, coupled with theoretical concern about
child for the presence of worms. With support from emerging resistance to benzimidazole anthelm-
the local health system, teachers can safely ad- intics,70 have led to efforts among researchers to
minister benzimidazole anthelmintics and prazi- identify new tools for the control of hookworm.
quantel.37,61 To date, the reduction of poverty and increased
School-based deworming offers a number of economic development have done more to elimi-
health-related and other benefits to children, in- nate hookworm infection in industrialized nations
cluding improvements in iron and hemoglobin than any other factor, including sanitation, the use
status,62,63 in physical growth,30,63 in cognition, in of anthelmintics, the use of footwear, and health
educational achievement, and in school absentee- education.2 Until such socioeconomic reforms be-
ism,63,64 as well as major advantages for the whole come widespread, the implementation of the World
community, including reduced helminth transmis- Health Assembly’s resolution to reduce infection
sion through soil and a lower disease burden, es- and the development of a vaccine may help control
pecially for ascariasis and trichuriasis.61,63,65 It is hookworm infection.
less obvious, however, what effect school-based Supported by grants (to Dr. Hotez) from the Human Hookworm
Vaccine Initiative of the Sabin Vaccine Institute, the Bill and Melinda
deworming will have on reducing the disease bur- Gates Foundation, the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation,
den of hookworm in a community. Because the dis- the China Medical Board of New York (98-674), the National Health
ease burden is often concentrated among adult pop- and Medical Research Council of Australia, the Ramaciotti Founda-
tion, and the National Institutes of Health (AI-32726) and by a
ulations (including women of reproductive age), Wellcome Trust Advanced Training Fellowship (73656, to Dr. Brook-
and because preschool children are particularly vul- er). Dr. Bethony is the recipient of an International Research Scien-
nerable to the effects of iron deficiency,33,34 in many tist Development Award (1K01 TW00009) from the John E. Fogarty
International Center, National Institutes of Health. Dr. Loukas is the
communities school-based programs miss impor- recipient of an R.D. Wright Career Development Award from the
tant vulnerable populations that are at risk for hook- National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia.
worm. In contrast to infections with ascaris and Dr. Hotez reports having received consulting fees from Pfizer and
GlaxoSmithKline, and Drs. Hotez, Bottazzi, and Loukas report hav-
trichuris, it is unlikely that school-based deworm- ing submitted an international patent application for a hookworm
ing will reduce the transmission of hookworm.66 vaccine.
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