PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Jun 2018)

Risk factors for human acute leptospirosis in northern Tanzania.

  • Michael J Maze,
  • Shama Cash-Goldwasser,
  • Matthew P Rubach,
  • Holly M Biggs,
  • Renee L Galloway,
  • Katrina J Sharples,
  • Kathryn J Allan,
  • Jo E B Halliday,
  • Sarah Cleaveland,
  • Michael C Shand,
  • Charles Muiruri,
  • Rudovick R Kazwala,
  • Wilbrod Saganda,
  • Bingileki F Lwezaula,
  • Blandina T Mmbaga,
  • Venance P Maro,
  • John A Crump

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006372
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. e0006372

Abstract

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IntroductionLeptospirosis is a major cause of febrile illness in Africa but little is known about risk factors for human infection. We conducted a cross-sectional study to investigate risk factors for acute leptospirosis and Leptospira seropositivity among patients with fever attending referral hospitals in northern Tanzania.MethodsWe enrolled patients with fever from two referral hospitals in Moshi, Tanzania, 2012-2014, and performed Leptospira microscopic agglutination testing on acute and convalescent serum. Cases of acute leptospirosis were participants with a four-fold rise in antibody titers, or a single reciprocal titer ≥800. Seropositive participants required a single titer ≥100, and controls had titers ResultsWe identified 24 acute cases, 252 seropositive participants, and 592 controls. Rice farming (OR 14.6), cleaning cattle waste (OR 4.3), feeding cattle (OR 3.9), farm work (OR 3.3), and an increasing cattle urine exposure score (OR 1.2 per point) were associated with acute leptospirosis.ConclusionsIn our population, exposure to cattle and rice farming were risk factors for acute leptospirosis. Although further data is needed, these results suggest that cattle may be an important source of human leptospirosis. Further investigation is needed to explore the potential for control of livestock Leptospira infection to reduce human disease.