Oncomelania hupensis Distribution and Schistosomiasis Transmission Risk in Different Environments under Field Conditions

Author:

Li Yinlong1ORCID,Guo Suying1ORCID,Dang Hui1,Zhang Lijuan1,Xu Jing1,Li Shizhu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Institute of Parasitic Disease, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (Chinese Center for Tropical Disease Research), NHC Key Laboratory of Parasite and Vector Biology, WHO Collaborating Center for Tropical Disease, National Center for International Research on Tropical Disease, Shanghai 200025, China

Abstract

The goal of schistosomiasis prevention and control in China is shifting from transmission interruption to elimination. However, the area inhabited by the intermediate host, the snail Oncomelania hupensis, has not changed much in recent years. Different environmental types have different impacts on snail breeding, and understanding these differences is conducive to improving the efficiency of snail monitoring and control and to saving resources. Based on previous epidemiological data, we selected 199 villages in 2020 and 269 villages in 2021 from transmission control, transmission interruption, and elimination areas of snail breeding. Snail surveys were conducted in selected villages using systematic sampling and/or environmental sampling methods in six types of snail-breeding environments (canals, ponds, paddy fields, dry lands, bottomlands, and undefined environments). All live snails collected from the field were evaluated for Schistosoma japonicum infection using the microscopic dissection method, and a subsample of snails was subjected to loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) to assess the presence of S. japonicum infection. Snail distribution data and infection rate and nucleic acid positive rate of schistosomes in snails were calculated and analyzed. The 2-year survey covered 29,493 ha of the environment, in which 12,313 ha of snail habitats were detected. In total, 51.16 ha of new snail habitats and 107.76 ha of re-emergent snail habitats were identified during the survey. The occurrence rate of snails in canals (10.04%, 95% CI: 9.88–10.20%) and undefined environments (20.66%, 95% CI: 19.64–21.67%) was relatively high in 2020, and the density of snails in bottomlands (0.39, 95% CI: 0.28–0.50) and undefined environments (0.43, 95% CI: 0.14–1.60) was relatively high in 2021. Of the 227,355 live snails collected in this study, none were S. japonicum-positive as determined by microscopy. Of the 20,131 pooled samples, however, 5 were S. japonicum-positive based on LAMP analysis, and they were distributed in three environmental types: 3 in bottomland, 1 in dry land, and 1 in a canal. The bottomland environment has a high risk of schistosomiasis transmission because it contains a large area of newly emerging and re-emerging snail habitats, and it also had the most breeding snails infected with S. japonicum. Thus, this habitat type should be the key target for snail monitoring and early warning and for the prevention and control of schistosomiasis.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Science & Technology Fundamental Resources Investigation Program

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Immunology and Microbiology

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