Abstract
Background. Age prevalence curves for areas in which schistosomiasis is endemic suggest that humans develop partial immunity to reinfection beginning in early adolescence. We conducted a 2-year longitudinal study to determine whether children infected with Schistosoma mansoni develop protection-related immune responses after treatment with praziquantel and whether the development of these immune responses is accelerated by frequent treatment after reinfection. Methods. Children (8-10 years old) were tested for S. mansoni every 4 months and treated with praziquantel when positive (arm A; ) or were tested and treated at the end of the 2-year follow-up np68 period (arm B; np49). Results. Children in arm A who remained free of infection during follow-up had significantly higher baseline levels of schistosome-specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) than did children with ≥2 repeat diagnoses of S. mansoni infection. Children with ≥2 repeat diagnoses of S. mansoni infection had significantly increased levels of antischistosome IgE and CD23+ B cells after receiving ≥3 praziquantel treatments over the course of follow-up. No increase in either parameter was seen in children who received only the baseline praziquantel treatment. Conclusions. B cell activation and anti-schistosome IgE are associated with resistance to S. mansoni in children, and these immunological parameters can be increased by multiple rounds of infections and praziquantel-induced cures. © 2010 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America.
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CITATION STYLE
Black, C. L., Muok, E. M. O., Mwinzi, P. N. M., Carter, J. M., Karanja, D. M. S., Secor, W. E., & Colley, D. G. (2010). Increases in levels of schistosome-specific immunoglobulin E and CD23 + B cells in a cohort of kenyan children undergoing repeated treatment and reinfection with schistosoma mansoni. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 202(3), 399–405. https://doi.org/10.1086/653828
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