Landscape of guidance documents used at TropNet and GeoSentinel centres for the clinical management of schistosomiasis outside endemic areas: a systematic appraisal

F Tamarozzi, C Mazzi, S Antinori, M Arsuaga, SL Becker, C Bocanegra, E Bottieau, D Buonfrate, AL Bustinduy, D Camprubí-Ferrer, E Caumes, A Duvignaud, MP Grobusch, R Huits, S Jaureguiberry, S Jordan, A Mueller, M Ndao, A Neumayr, JA Perez-MolinaFO Pettersen, C Rothe, J Salas-Coronas, F Salvador, JR Stothard, LR Tomasoni, JJV Hellemond, L van Lieshout, SD Vaughan, LJ Wammes, CP Yansouni, L Zammarchi, FG Gobbi

Research output: Contribution to journalA1: Web of Science-articlepeer-review

Abstract

Background
The diagnostic and treatment approaches for schistosomiasis in individual patients, outside endemic areas, are not standardised. This study aimed to appraise the reference documents that the experts from the TropNet and GeoSentinel networks use in practice as guidance for the clinical management of their patients with (suspect) schistosomiasis.
Methods
We systematically appraised the following data from the referenced guidance documents: i) document type, ii) case definitions, iii) diagnostic techniques envisaged; iv) treatment recommendations; v) follow-up recommendations; vi) screening recommendations, and vii) symptom-based diagnostic suspicion.
Results
Twenty-two of the 30 responders (73.3 %) indicated 19 reference documents, three of which were WHO material not intended for individual clinical management. Only 4/19 (21.1 %) documents were national recommendations; no international guideline was indicated. Case definitions were explicitly presented in only one document (1/19; 5.3 %). Diagnostic tools were detailed in 11/16 (68.8 %) and follow-up guidance in 8/16 (50 %) documents. Treatment guidance was provided in 14/16 (87.5 %) documents.
Conclusions
Heterogeneity in clinical guidance was evident, although with noticeable overlap at least for chronic schistosomiasis. This confirms the need to formalise case definitions, which should be used to design trials to rigorously assess diagnostic tools and treatment schemes, and eventually come to harmonization of clinical management guidance.
Original languageEnglish
Article number102822
JournalTravel Medicine and Infectious Disease
Volume64
Number of pages7
ISSN1477-8939
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Diagnosis
  • Guidelines
  • Migrants
  • Schistosomiasis
  • Travellers
  • Treatment

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