Chagas disease, a parasitic infection spread to humans by insects, is not the new HIV/AIDS of the Americas, according to infectious disease experts who called the comparison âunrealisticâ and âunfortunate.â
Responding to an editorial posted Monday in PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases and the media attention that followed, Rick Tarleton, president of the Chagas Disease Foundation, said the diseases have little in common beyond disproportionately affecting poor people.
âI think itâs an unfortunate comparison,â said Tarleton, a distinguished research professor at the University of Georgia studying Chagas disease. âThere are stigmas attached to HIV/AIDS that themselves are inappropriate, but it would be even more inappropriate to apply them to something like Chagas disease.â
About 300,000 people in the U.S. have Chagas disease, an infection transmitted to humans by blood-sucking insects. But almost all of them became infected before coming to the U.S. from Mexico, Central America and South America, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
âItâs difficult to say whether the type of attention this is generating is going to be good or bad for people with the disease,â said Tarleton, describing how many people with Chagas disease face obstacles in getting care. âI donât think the comparison to HIVAIDS is a realistic one, and I donât expect it to serve the situation terribly well.â
But Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of Baylor College of Medicineâs National School of Tropical Medicine, said he penned the provocative editorial to rally resources for people with Chagas disease.
âI wanted to call attention to the disease; make people aware of it,â said Hotez, adding he had no intention to diminish the impact of HIV/AIDS. âI believe that Chagas disease is every bit as important as the AIDS problem, but no oneâs ever heard of the disease.â
When asked whether drawing a connection to HIV would stigmatize people with Chagas disease, Hotez replied âI donât think it can get any worse for them.â
âThey already lack access to medical care and many governments are ignoring the problem,â he said. âTheyâre already treated as outcasts.â
The insects that transmit Chagas disease, nicknamed âkissing bugsâ for their tendency to bite peopleâs lips, infest low-income housing in countries where the disease is endemic. They bite at night, allowing parasites from their feces to infect the itchy wound. Insecticide can kill them, but few can afford it.
âFor most of the people affected, itâs not an avoidable infection,â said Tarleton. âIt is totally preventable, but largely unavoidable in certain regions.â
But unlike HIV, Chagas disease is largely asymptomatic. Only 30 percent of those who get it develop serious health problems such as heart failure.
âAn HIV infection without treatment is essentially a death sentence, but most people with Chagas disease live with the infection for many decades and some people live a perfectly long life without any treatment,â said Tarleton.
And unlike HIV, Chagas disease can be treated in three months.
âIn Chagas disease, there are treatments that cure the infection,â said Tarleton. Â Current HIV treatments are life-long. âThe downside is there is toxicity associated with those drugs in a substantial number of people, and itâs difficult to determine how effective the drugs are. They can cure the infection, but they donât always cure the infection.â
Those drugs also come at a cost upward of $11,000, according to the editorial, making them out of reach for most.
Dr. William Schaffner, chair of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., and president of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, agreed thereâs much to be done to improve care for people with Chagas disease.
âThis might be called a forgotten disease of forgotten people â" impoverished people in the developing world. And there have not been major efforts to find better drugs to combat this illness,â he said.
And while the comparison between Chagas and HIV may be alarmist, Schaffner said he hopes it will help rally resources.
âI was surprised, frankly, at the whole tone of the editorial,â he said. âBut I hope it shifts the view from forgotten problems of forgotten people to newly recognized and appreciated problems of people who need help.â

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