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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Anthroponotic and Zoonotic Hookworm DNA in an Indigenous Community in Coastal Ecuador: Potential Cross-Transmission between Dogs and Humans.

Journal:
Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland)
Year:
2024
Authors:
Calvopina, Manuel et al.
Affiliation:
One Health Research Group
Species:
dog

Abstract

Humans can be infected with anthroponotic (and) and with zoonotic (,,, and) hookworms from dogs. Anthroponotic species are usually thought not to infect dogs. We used the internal transcribed spacer-1 (ITS1) gene in a quantitative PCR to detect anthroponotic and zoonotic hookworm species in fecal samples from 54 children and 79 dogs living in an indigenous community in tropical Northwestern Ecuador. Hookworm DNA was detected in 59.3% of children and 92.4% of dogs. Among samples from children, zoonotic hookworms were detected in 24.1% (14.8%,11.1%and1.9%), whilst in dog samples, anthroponotic species were detected in 19.0% (12.4% and6.3%). Sanger sequencing was performed successfully on 60 qPCR-positive samples (16 from children and 44 from dogs), and consensus sequences were obtained with >98% homology to GenBank references for hookworm spp. Phylogenetic analysis showed a close relationship between anthroponotic and zoonoticspecies and no heterogeneity betweenand; in human samples, we foundbut notsequences and we were unable to identifyin the dog samples. No infections withwere detected. Our data provide evidence for high rates of hookworm infections in indigenous children and dogs in a marginalized rural setting in coastal Ecuador. We also found evidence for potential cross-transmission of hookworm spp. between humans and dogs that represent a potential domestic reservoir for zoonotic and anthroponotic hookworms.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39204210/