Long-term outcomes of benznidazole treatment in chronic Chagas disease: A 27-year cohort study of parasitological cure and death in the Jequitinhonha Valley, Brazil.
Júlio César Santoro de Oliveira Assis, Lourena Tomazelli Suave, Gabriela Roberta Ramos Fernandes, Girley Francisco Machado-de-Assis, Helen Rodrigues Martins, Glaucia Diniz Alessio, Olindo Assis Martins-Filho, Renato Afonso Salgado, Mariângela Carneiro, Rosália Morais Torres, Marta de Lana
Abstract
Open AccessBACKGROUND: Chagas disease (CD) is a neglected tropical infection prevalent in rural areas of Latin America. The etiological treatment is indicated for patients with both acute and chronic phases of CD, except in the most advanced clinical stage of the disease. However, there are still several divergences regarding the benefits of etiological treatment in chronic CD as far as the parasitological cure and survival/mortality outcomes. The present study aimed at verifying the impact of benznidazole (BZ) treatment on parasitological cure and death of patients with chronic CD at 9, 13, and 27 years post-treatment. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to verify the impact of BZ-treatment on parasitological cure and death of patients with chronic CD at 9, 13, and 27-year follow-up. METHODS: A historical and prospective cohort of 42 patients with chronic CD, categorized as BZ-treated (BZ-T, n = 21) and Not-treated (NT, n = 21), were evaluated after 9, 13, and 27 years of follow-up, using parasitological tests (Hemoculture-HC, polymerase chain reaction-PCR, and quantitative real-time PCR-qPCR), conventional-CS (ELISA), and non-conventional-NCS (Chagas-Flow ATE) serology, employing three distinct cure criteria, one classical and two alternative. Survival analysis for death was determined by the Kaplan-Meier method. RESULTS: Parasitological data (HC, PCR and qPCR) were negative in all patients (BZ-T and NT) at 27-year follow-up. The CS was negative in 75% and 23.1% of patients from BZ-T and NT, respectively. NCS had a higher negative rate (95%) than CS (23.1%) in BZ-T. The classic cure criterion demonstrated that 75% of BZ-T achieved a successful therapeutic outcome. Moreover, the use of the second and third alternative cure criteria revealed a higher proportion of cure in BZ-T (90%). The overall mortality over 27-year follow-up was 4.8% in BZ-T and 38.1% in NT. Kaplan-Meier survival curves for survival estimated 95% and 40% for BZ-T and NT patient groups. CONCLUSIONS: The overall analysis demonstrated that BZ-T chronic CD patients yielded higher parasitological cure rates as well as increased survival over a 27-year follow-up. The Chagas-Flow ATE proved to be a valuable tool for monitoring therapeutic response and, together with parasitological and molecular parasitological methods, provided a more accurate cure criterion.