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Tropical Diseases Research in Panama: Historical Perspectives and Current Opportunities. Joel G. Breman, M.D., D.T.P.H. Fogarty International Center National Institutes of Health Bethesda, Maryland, USA
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Tropical Diseases Research in Panama:Historical Perspectives and Current Opportunities Joel G. Breman, M.D., D.T.P.H. Fogarty International Center National Institutes of Health Bethesda, Maryland, USA Workshop to Establish the Santiago Center for Geographic Medicine and Emerging Tropical Disease Santiago, Panama 6–7 December 2002
40 Years of Tropical Medicine Research A History of the Gorgas Memorial Institute of Tropical and Preventive Medicine, Inc. and the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory Willard H. Wright, D.V.M., M.S., Ph.D. Washington, 1970 Reese Press, Baltimore, Maryland
The Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, 1928-1968 Six Epochs 1928 – 1934 (political will) • Founded by Dr. Belisario Porras, President, Republic of Panama - Land - Building - U.S. Congress support 1934 – 1943 (scientific expertise) • Staffing - Protozologist (C.M. Johnson) - Helminthologist (A.O. Foster) - Entomologist (C.E. Rozeboom) 1943 – 1949 (scientific priorities) • Insect repellents, insecticides - U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
The Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, 1928-1968 (2) 1949 – 1956 (public health priorities) • Yellow Fever (Santo Tomás, Hospital) • Yellow Fever Service of Panama 1956 – 1960 (resource increase) • $150,000 from U.S. Congress (tripled budget) • NIAID grant, leishmanasis 1960 – 1968 (resource increase) • $500,000 from U.S. Congress for infrastructure • Insectary • Grants and gifts
The Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, 1928-1968Types of Research • Core activities - Epidemiology - Treatment - Control - Laboratory work in support of field activities
The Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, 1928-1968Types of Research (2) • Major themes - Malaria - Yellow fever - Other arboviral infections - Chagas disease - Leishmaniasis - Equine trypanasomiasis - Residual insecticides
The Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, 1928-1968Types of Research (3) - Helminithic and protozoal infections - Diarrheal diseases - Reservoir hosts - Immunology - Other: herpetology, insect genetics (Drosophila)
Short- and Long-Term Research Trends • Short-term - Equine trypanosomiasis, 1930-1946 (H.S. Eakins), retirement; horses used less • Equine helminthiasis, 1934-1939 (A.O. Foster) • Cattle trypanasomiasis, 1940-1943 (war priorities) • Intestinal helminths, 1930 (intermittent, E.C. Faust) • Tropical climatology, 1941 - Tuberculosis, BCG vaccination, 1949-1951 (taken over by Servicio Cooperativo Interamericano de Salud Publica)
Long Term Projects • Malaria, 1929 (H.C. Clark, C.M. Johnson) • Chagas disease, 1931 (C.M. Johnson) • Leishmaniasis, 1944 (M. Hertig, A. Herrer) • Insect taxonomy, 1929 (D.P. Curry) • Santa Rosa Field Station, 1931 and Chagres River Villages (DDT use)
How Research Projects Chosen Incidence, prevalence, epidemics Available staff Outside scientific collaboration Resources Serendipity
Major Achievements Malaria, began in 1929 • Drug treatment - Quinine studies, 1931 - Atebrin/plasmochin, 1935 - Quinine/plasmochin, 1935 - DDT house spraying, 1945 (continued to 1977) - Chloroquine/paludrine weekly, 1947 Parasite rates dropped 26.5 % 0.7 % (CQ) 34.8 % 1.5% (P) - Pyrimethamine/primaquine + DDT, 1960 (La Repressa and Mendoza villages) eliminated disease after 2 months! Maintained 2 years But 53 cases detected from 1962 - 1964
Malaria (con’t) • Primate malaria - P. brasilianum, attempt transmission to human volunteers, 1930 - Immunity and P. falciparum, 1931 - Human malaria to monkeys, 1966 Aotus trivirgatus and P. vivax, 1967 Aotus (night monkey) Ateles (spider monkey) Saquinus (marmoset) Cebus • Transmission with Anopheles albimanus • DDT resistance detected after 8 years of use, late 1960s
American Trypanasomiasis (T. cruzi)Chagas Disease, began 1931 • Diagnosis • Prevalence • Manifestations • Treatment • Epidemiology • Hosts • Vectors and ecology 3.8 % positive of 1,251 tested by CF test, 1963 40,000 cases, 1966
Chagas Disease (2) • Studies in Santo Tomás Hospital • Arrythmias (RBBB, LBBB, A/V block) • Ventricular and atrial enlargement • Ventricular aneurysms • Treatment • 8 aminoquinolines
Chagas Disease (3) • Parasitology and Ecology - T.cruzi found in 33 animal species; dogs, rats, positive - T. rangeli found to cross-react • Entomology and Ecology - Rhodnius pallescens efficient, but R. prolixus (not native) could not be infected with local isolates. - Other triatomes identified, but R. pallescens found in native houses of 3,203. 32.1% infected with T. cruzi and 4.1% - 8.1% with T. rangeli (non-pathogenic, 1960s)
Leishmaniasis, 1944 • Epidemiology • Treatment • Vectors and ecology • Findings - Forest disease, disappears when forests cleared - Pyrimethamine, 90% cure - Geographic strain differences - Natural infection in wild caught Phlebotomines, infection rate 8.1% - Animal model studies; tried rats, mice, hamsters, kinkajou, olingo, porcupine, marmoset Succeeded with spiny rat
Helminths, 1930 • Ascaris lumbricoides, “common”, 80% prevalence • Necator americanus, “common”, 80% prevalence • Trichuris trichiura, 1.0% - 21.0%, pos. • Strongyloides stercoralis, 20% pos. of 1,663 in Santa Tomás Hospital with 10.5% of those positive having symptoms • Mansonella ozzardi, 9.9% of 244 • Capillaria hepatica in 8% of 194 stools • First report of Echinococcus oligarthrus from fatal case; seen in puma, jaguar, jaguarundi, agouti • Trichinella spiralis; EEE, Ilhéus virus, Jap B encephelitis, ended fatally in animals
Rickettsial and Viral Diseases • Rickettsial • Q fever, first report in Panama, 1946 • Murine typhus, first report, 1947 • RMSF, first report, 1951 • Viruses • Mosquito vectors of yellow fever, first description in Panama and Central America, 1949 • Vector ecology and transmission studies, 1949 • SLE, first recovery and identification of human patients, 1957 • Ilhéus virus, first isolation, 1958 • Changuinola, first isolation, 1960 • New arboviruses discovered, Madrid, Ossa, Patois, Zegla, 1961 • Wyeomia subgroup, first isolated from human, 1963 • Bussuquara, first isolation from human, 1964 • Ilhéus virus, first case of encephalitis, 1964 • SLE found Deinocerites (crab-hole mosquitoes) as host, 1964 • Vesicular Stomatitis Virus, isolation from humans, sentinel monkeys, 1968
Entomology - Dermatobia hominis (human botfly), lifecycle in man, 1929 - An. albimanus, first laboratory colony in Central America, 1935 - DDT for Phlebotomine control, 1944 - DDT for Simulium control, 1945 - DDT for Culicoides sandflies, 1945 - Trombiculidae (chigger mites), habits and ecology, 1945 - Inventory of ticks and biting insects, 1966 • Miscellaneous - Inventory of poisonous snakes and incidence of snake bites, 1930-1954
Papers Published by the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, 1930-1969 * 1943-1945 = 12 papers
Malaria, 60 papers Birds, 54 Culicidae, 51 Phlebotomus, 49 Tabanidae, 47 Animals, wild, 40 Monkey diseases, 36 Anopheles, 35 Laboratory infection, 35 Yellow fever, 26 Laboratory techniques, 23 Major Topics in Publications by the Gorgas Memorial Laboratory, 1930-1969
Middle America Research Unit, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Canal Zone (1958-1972)* Focus on arthropod virology • Discovery of Machupo virus (Bolivian hemorrhagic fever) - Uncovered biology and ecology of virus, and rodent reservoir leading to building arenavirus family • Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis virus, discovery of antigenic and equine virulence variants; live virus vaccine (TC-83) for lab workers • Vesicular stomatitus virus; first clear demonstration of transovarial transmission of an arbovirus * Provided by Karl M. Johnson, MD, Director, MARU, 1964-1972
“Every advantage in the past is judged in the light of the future issue”Demosthenes
Recent National Institutes of Health and Government of Panama Collaborations • National Cancer Institute, 1993-2001 - Human retroviruses: epidemiological survey at Hospital Santo Tomás and Research Triangle Park Institute - Establishment of cancer information center at Instituto de Nacionale de Oncologie, Managua • National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1997-1999 - Drug involvement among Latin Americans, Departamento de Farmacodependencias and Johns Hopkins University
Recent National Institutes of Health and Government of Panama Collaborations (2) • National Institute on Deafness and Other Communicable Disorders, 1997-2002 - Neural basis of complex-sound processing - National de Recursos Naturales Renovables and Washington University • Pan American Fellowship - PAHO/WHO partners with NIH - One year postdoctoral training in the NIH intramural laboratories - Focus on Caribbean, Central America and Andean countries - Regional public health issues are priority
Recent National Institutes of Health and Government of Panama Collaborations (3) • Fogarty International Center - International Cooperative Biodiversity Group, 1995-1998: Bioprospecting to discover new drugs for malaria and other infectious diseases. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, University of Panama, Gorgas Memorial Institute for Health Research, G.W. Hansen’s Disease Center (Louisiana), Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Nature Foundation of Panama, Novartis, Conservation International - Fogarty International Research Collaborative Awards Bioprospecting in the Panamanian rainforest, 1995-1998 Fundacion Para La Conservacion de Los Recursos and the University of Utah - Studies of Toxoplasma bradyzoite (1999-2002) Gorgas Memorial Institute for Health Research and Stanford University
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