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June
10, 2004
UCSD Partners With Peru In NIH
Grant
To Battle Malaria, World’s Number 2 Killer
By Sue Pondrom
In the middle
of the Peruvian Amazon, a battle against malaria – the
second largest killer of people worldwide – will be undertaken
by an international team of researchers led by tropical disease
specialist Joseph Vinetz, M.D., from the University of California,
San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine. The team will also study
a variety of other tropical infectious diseases endemic to the
area.
With $750,000 from
the Fogarty Training Grant for Global Infectious Diseases of
the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Vinetz and the grant’s
Peruvian co-director, Eduardo Gotuzzo, director of the Tropical
Medicine Institute, Universidad Paruana Cayetano Heredia, will
oversee a training program and research projects, both at the
program headquarters in Iquitos, Peru, and at UCSD, where selected
Peruvian researchers will receive advance medical-research training.
In spite of its virtual
elimination in the United States, malaria is still the cause
of approximately 1.5 million deaths a year and 300 million infections.
Only tuberculosis cases outnumber malaria, and patients with
HIV/AIDS rank third.
U.S. travelers to malaria-infested
areas are susceptible to the disease and are warned by the Centers
for Disease Control (CDC) to take anti-malarial medication.
Also at risk are U.S. soldiers stationed around the world and
the U.S. military is working on drugs and vaccines to try to
prevent the disease in its overseas soldiers.
In recent years, there’s
been an alarming increase in malaria cases in both the developed
and developing world, partly due to an increasing resistance
to chloroquine, the most common anti-malaria drug. The world
areas most impacted by the disease are South America, Asia and
Africa.
These are all reasons
that Vinetz has chosen malaria and another infectious disease
called leptospirosis as his areas of specialty. His colleagues
are internationally recognized experts who study intestinal
parasitic and bacterial infections, bioterrorism diseases such
as brucellosis, chronic disfiguring skin diseases such as leishmaniasis,
and viruses transmitted by mosquitos. Beginning this summer,
Vinetz will lead the international team of physicians from the
U.S. and Peru in the NIH-funded training program titled “Endemic
Infectious Diseases in the Peruvian Amazon.” Although
focusing primarily on malaria, the program will also include
other infectious diseases, such as leptospirosis, that impact
disadvantaged populations in developing countries. The overall
goals are to enhance research capacity in Peru, to establish
research connections between UCSD and Peru to expand opportunities
for biomedical research, and, overall, to create a model of
multidisciplinary research in developing countries.
Epidemic malaria has
rapidly emerged in the Peruvian Amazon region, increasing 50-fold
between 1992-97. According to the CDC, Peru reports the second
highest number of malaria cases in South America, after Brazil.
The symptoms of malaria include fever and flu-like illness with
chills, headache, muscle aches and fatigue. If not promptly
treated, the disease may cause kidney failure, coma and death.
Leptospirosis is a
bacterial disease transmitted from infected mammals (wild and
domestic) to humans via infected urine that may be in water.
It is primarily an occupational disease that affects farmers,
veterinarians and sewer workers or others whose work involves
animal contact. In humans, it causes a wide range of symptoms
such as high fever, severe headache, muscle aches and abdominal
distress. If the disease is not treated, the patient may develop
kidney damage, meningitis, liver failure and respiratory distress.
“The overall
goal of our UCSD program is to enhance Peruvian research capacity
in all facets of biomedical research, including research in
the lab, in the field and with human subjects. We’ll also
cover research ethics and health economics,” Vinetz said.
“Primarily, we’ll be in the Peruvian Amazon, training
local researchers, physicians, biologists, nurses, and students
wishing to pursue doctorates.”
Although the Peruvian
people are motivated to research the infectious diseases in
their region, there is a dearth of expertise and investment
in people and physical infractructure, Vinetz noted. “We’ll
be able to help them become self-sufficient.”
Peruvians who will
serve as mentors for the NIH-funded program include Universidad
Peruana Cayetano Heredia faculty Humberto Guerra, Jorge Arevalo,
and Alejandro Llanos. Additional Peruvians are Graciela Meza,
Universidad de Las Amazonas del Peru and Hermann Silva, Hospital
Apoyo de Iquitos. UCSD faculty who will participate in the training
project include C. Hoyt Bleakley, Joshua Fierer, Donald Guiney,
Frances Gillin, Michael Kalichman, Lynette Corbeil, Sharon Reed,
Victor Nizet and Monica Diaz.
Gary Klimpel, Robert
Tesh and Scott Weaver from the University of Texas Medical Branch,
and Margaret Kosek, Johns Hopkins University, will round out
the project team. Peruvian physicians already at UCSD training
include Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia medical graduates
Jessica Ricaldi, who will be entering the Molecular Pathology
doctoral program in the fall of 2004, and Christian Ganoza,
both of whom will be returning to Peru to continue their scientific
careers once they complete their training.
Prior to joining the
UCSD faculty as an associate professor in 2002, Vinetz was an
associate professor with the World Health Organization’s
Collaborating Center for Tropical Diseases at the University
of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. His past experience also
includes clinical training in internal medicine and infectious
diseases at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and as a Howard
Hughes Physician Postdoctoral Fellow in the Laboratory of Parasitic
Diseases at the National Institutes of Health.
Vinetz first visited
Peru in 1998 and was a participant in the Gorgas Expert Course
in Tropical Medicine in 2001, in which he now teaches. Now,
he spends about two months a year in his state-of-the-art laboratory
in Iquitos, Peru, where he has a group of 20 Peruvian researchers
and collaborators. Vinetz’ malaria studies focuses on
the molecular, cellular and biochemical mechanisms by which
the malaria parasite (the ookinete) invades the mosquito mid-gut.
His long-term goal is to develop strategies of blocking malaria
transmission. In his research on leptospirosis, Vinetz and his
team want to know why some patients develop only unapparent
infection or mild disease, while others develop jaundice, renal
failure, hemorrhage, meningitis and/or heart failure. Their
studies range from epidemiology and ecology to immunology to
molecular pathogenesis.
Media Contact: Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
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