INVESTIGADORES
BOTTASSO Oscar Adelmo
artículos
Título:
Trypanocidal therapy among children infected by Trypanosoma cruzi. Serological and electrocardiographic changes over a mean twenty-five-years follow-up period
Autor/es:
SUASNABAR, SANTIAGO; OLIVERA V; ARIAS E; BIZAI ML; BOTTASSO O; ARIAS E; FABBRO D
Revista:
ACTA TROPICA
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2021 vol. 222 p. 1 - 7
ISSN:
0001-706X
Resumen:
This study compared the serological and electrocardiographic evolution among patients with chronic T. cruzi infection treated during childhood or left untreated. A retrospective cohort study was conducted during a mean follow-up period of 25 years in 82 patients: half of them underwent treatment (nifurtimox 8, benznidazole 33) before being 15 years old, whereas the other half remained untreated. During the follow-up, negative seroconversion occurred in 92.7% of the treated children, while all the untreated ones remained positive for conventional serology. At baseline, 2 patients from each group had electrocardiographic abnormalities. During the study period, 4/41 (9.75%) and 9/41 (21.95%) of treated and untreated patients displayed an altered electrocardiogram, respectively. In multivariate analyses, the probability of developing electrocardiographic abnormalities was significantly reduced among treated patients (OR = 0.18, 95% CI = 0.04-0.79; p = 0.023). Electrocardiographic abnormalities attributable to Chagas cardiomyopathy were seen in 3 patients from the untreated group (complete right bundle branch block + left anterior fascicular block, frequent ventricular extrasystole, and left anterior fascicular block). The remarkable seronegativization seen in Benznidazole and Nifurtimox recipients underlines the parasiticidal effect of both compounds. Such demonstration along with thefact that CCC-related alterations were only present in the untreated group, reinforces the view of trypanocidal treatment in chronically T. cruzi-infected children as decreasing the risk for cardiomyopathy development.