1. Clinical Sequelae Associated with Unresolved Tropical Splenomegaly in a Cohort of Recently Resettled Congolese Refugees in the United States—Multiple States, 2015–2018
- Author
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Marwan Naoum, Bozena M. Morawski, Michelle Weinberg, Christina R. Phares, Olivia Samson, Hayder Allkhenfr, Emily S. Jentes, Susan Miller, Corey M. Peak, Alexander Klosovsky, Michael Kacka, Margaret Mortimer, Moses Mwesigwa, Henry Njuguna, Robert McDonald, Abby Davids, Nina Marano, S. Patrick Kachur, Matthew Goers, Roberta Z. Horth, Sally Ann Iverson, Jun Yang, William M. Stauffer, Carla Bezold, Mukunda Singh Basnet, Laura D. Zambrano, Yasser Bakhsh, Rebecca L. Laws, and Samuel L. Nsobya
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Praziquantel ,Cohort Studies ,0302 clinical medicine ,Schistosomiasis ,Child ,Anthelmintics ,Refugees ,Medical record ,Anemia ,Articles ,Hepatitis A ,Middle Aged ,Hepatitis B ,Hepatitis C ,Infectious Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Democratic Republic of the Congo ,Disease Progression ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,030231 tropical medicine ,Antimalarials ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Virology ,Eosinophilia ,medicine ,Humans ,business.industry ,Artemether, Lumefantrine Drug Combination ,Infant ,Alkaline Phosphatase ,medicine.disease ,Thrombocytopenia ,United States ,Malaria ,Elevated alkaline phosphatase ,Immunoglobulin M ,Case-Control Studies ,Relative risk ,Splenomegaly ,Etiology ,Parasitology ,business - Abstract
Tropical splenomegaly is often associated with malaria and schistosomiasis. In 2014 and 2015, 145 Congolese refugees in western Uganda diagnosed with splenomegaly during predeparture medical examinations underwent enhanced screening for various etiologies. After anecdotal reports of unresolved splenomegaly and complications after U.S. arrival, patients were reassessed to describe long-term clinical progression after arrival in the United States. Post-arrival medical information was obtained through medical chart abstraction in collaboration with state health partners in nine participating states. We evaluated observed splenomegaly duration and associated clinical sequelae between 130 case patients from eastern Congo and 102 controls through adjusted hierarchical Poisson models, accounting for familial clustering. Of the 130 case patients, 95 (73.1%) had detectable splenomegaly after arrival. Of the 85 patients with records beyond 6 months, 45 (52.9%) had persistent splenomegaly, with a median persistence of 14.7 months (range 6.0–27.9 months). Of the 112 patients with available results, 65 (58.0%) patients had evidence of malaria infection, and the mean splenomegaly duration did not differ by Plasmodium species. Refugees with splenomegaly on arrival were 43% more likely to have anemia (adjusted relative risk [aRR]: 1.43, 95% CI: 1.04–1.97). Those with persistent splenomegaly were 60% more likely (adjusted relative risk [aRR]: 1.60, 95% CI: 1.15–2.23) to have a hematologic abnormality, particularly thrombocytopenia (aRR: 5.53, 95% CI: 1.73–17.62), and elevated alkaline phosphatase (aRR: 1.57, 95% CI: 1.03–2.40). Many patients experienced persistent splenomegaly, contradicting literature describing resolution after treatment and removal from an endemic setting. Other possible etiologies should be investigated and effective treatment, beyond treatment for malaria and schistosomiasis, explored.
- Published
- 2020