Scabies
- PMID: 39362885
- DOI: 10.1038/s41572-024-00552-8
Scabies
Abstract
Scabies is one of the most common and highest-burden skin diseases globally. Estimates suggest that >200 million people worldwide have scabies at any one time, with an annual prevalence of 455 million people, with children in impoverished and overcrowded settings being the most affected. Scabies infection is highly contagious and leads to considerable morbidity. Secondary bacterial infections are common and can cause severe health complications, including sepsis or necrotizing soft-tissue infection, renal damage and rheumatic heart disease. There is no vaccine or preventive treatment against scabies and, for the past 30 years, only few broad-spectrum antiparasitic drugs (mainly topical permethrin and oral ivermectin) have been widely available. Treatment failure is common because drugs have short half-lives and do not kill all developmental stages of the scabies parasite. At least two consecutive treatments are needed, which is difficult to achieve in resource-poor and itinerant populations. Another key issue is the lack of a practical, rapid, cheap and accurate diagnostic tool for the timely detection of scabies, which could prevent the cycle of exacerbation and disease persistence in communities. Scabies control will require a multifaceted approach, aided by improved diagnostics and surveillance, new treatments, and increased public awareness.
© 2024. Springer Nature Limited.
References
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- Fischer, K. & Chosidow, O. Scabies (Springer, 2023). This book covers the current status quo in scabies research.
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- World Health Organization. WHO Informal Consultation on a Framework for Scabies Control (WHO, 2019).
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- Bornstein, S., Mörner, T. & Samuel, W. M. in Parasitic Diseases of Wild Mammals (eds Samuel, W. M., Pybus, M. J. & Kocan, A. A.) 107–119 (Iowa State University Press, 2001).
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