Mapping the Potential Risk of Mycetoma Infection in Sudan
Mapping the Potential Risk of Mycetoma Infection in Sudan
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Date
2015-02
Authors
Samy, Abdallah M.
Sande, Wendy WJ. van de
Fahal, Ahmed H.
Peterson, A. Townsend
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
UOFK
Abstract
In 2013, the World Health Organization (WHO) recognized mycetoma as one of the
neglected tropical conditions due to the efforts of the Mycetoma Consortium. This same
consortium formulated knowledge gaps that require further research. One of these gaps
was that few data are available on the epidemiology and transmission cycle of the
causative agents. Previous work suggested a soil-borne or Acacia thorn-prick-mediated
origin of mycetoma infections, but no studies have investigated effects of soil type and
Acacia geographic distribution on mycetoma case distributions.
Here, we map risk of mycetoma infection across Sudan and South Sudan using
Ecological Niche Modeling (ENM). For this study, records of mycetoma cases were
obtained from the scientific literature and GIDEON; Acacia records were obtained from
the Global Biodiversity Information Facility. We developed ENMs based on digital GIS
data layers summarizing soil characteristics, land-surface temperature, and greenness
indices to provide a rich picture of environmental variation across Sudan and South
Sudan. ENMs were calibrated in known endemic districts and transferred countrywide;
model results suggested that risk is greatest in an east-west belt across central Sudan.
Visualizing ENMs in environmental dimensions, mycetoma occurs under diverse
environmental conditions. We compared niches of mycetoma and Acacia trees, and
could not reject the null hypothesis of niche similarity. This study revealed contributions
of different environmental factors to mycetoma infection risk, identified suitable
environments and regions for transmission, signaled a potential mycetoma-Acacia
association, and provided steps towards a robust risk map for the disease.
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Keywords
Mapping,Potential ,Risk, Mycetoma, Infection, Sudan