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REVIEW article

Front. Public Health, 18 February 2020
Sec. Infectious Diseases: Epidemiology and Prevention

The Geographical Distribution of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Causative Agents in Iran and Its Neighboring Countries, A Review

\nMohammad Amin Ghatee,Mohammad Amin Ghatee1,2Walter R. Taylor,Walter R. Taylor3,4Mehdi Karamian
Mehdi Karamian5*
  • 1Cellular and Molecular Research Center, Yasuj University of Medical Sciences, Yasuj, Iran
  • 2Department of Parasitology, School of Medicine, Yasuj University of Medical Sciences, Yasuj, Iran
  • 3Clinical Therapeutics Unit, Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Bangkok, Thailand
  • 4Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
  • 5Infectious Diseases Research Center, Birjand University of Medical Sciences, Birjand, Iran

Leishmania tropica and Leishmania major are both the main cause of anthroponotic (ACL) and zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis (ZCL), respectively, in the Old World. Leishmania infantum and Leishmania donovani, which are important causes of visceral leishmaniasis, have also occasionally been reported in CL patients. The present study investigates the current distribution of causative species of CL in Iran and neighboring countries in the Middle East. There has been expansion of L. tropica into new urban and rural foci in Iran, with well-documented cases of visceralization, a substantial increase of CL in Syria, and the emergence of new foci and outbreaks in Turkey and Iraq, especially due to L. major. Civil war in Syria and Iraq, population movement, poverty, and climatic change play important roles in the changing CL distribution in this region. Control programs should adopt a multidisciplinary approach based on active surveillance and case finding, especially in vulnerable refugee populations, determination of hazard maps for CL hot points using GIS and other advanced technology, the free distribution of drugs, rodent control, and greater community engagement in poor and marginalized populations. Comprehensive molecular studies that could show the species and strains of Leishmania in different areas of each country can give a better view from the distribution of CL in this region.

Introduction

Leishmaniasis is the complex disease with a spectrum of clinical manifestations, including cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL), mucocutaneous leishmaniasis (MCL), diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis (DCL), and visceral leishmaniasis (VL, also known as kala-azar). It is transmitted by female nocturnally biting sand flies, Phlebotomus in the “Old World (OW)” and Lutzomia in the “New World (NW).” CL is more prevalent than VL and is distributed in more than 90 countries with the majority of cases occurring in South and Central America, the Mediterranean Basin and extending across the Middle East to Central Asia. The least burdensome regions include South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), but within SSA, East Africa (e.g., Ethiopia, Kenya) is endemic for CL and VL. VL is mostly distributed in South Asia, SSA, and South and Central America. High-burden countries, India, Bangladesh, Sudan, Ethiopia, and Brazil, account for 90% of VL patients while lower rates of VL occur in Southern Europe, Central Asia, China, and the Middle East including Iran (1).

Leishmaniasis is mainly zoonotic, but Leishmania donovani and Leishmania tropica, the causes of OWVL and OWCL, respectively, are transmitted from person to person and are also described as anthroponotic (A) VL and CL (2). The NWCL species such as Leishmania braziliensis, Leishmania guyanensis, Leishmania amazonensis, and Leishmania mexicana are zoonotic species and are endemic in Central and South America; their zoonotic reservoirs include forest rodents and sloths (3). The zoonotic reservoirs for zoonotic OWCL (ZCL) due to Leishmania major and Leishmania aethiopica are different rodent species (4) and hyraxes (2), respectively. Although humans are the main reservoir hosts of L. tropica, latterly it has been found in several animal species such as dogs (5), hyraxes (6), jackals, and foxes (7) and raise the question of a zoonotic cycle in some geographic regions of the Middle East.

The two principal OWCL species overlap in their geographical distribution. L. major extends from West Africa to Central Asia and L. tropica is common in the Eastern Mediterranean, Middle East, North India, Afghanistan, and northeast and South Africa (2). The clinical manifestations of OWCL vary by species. L. aethiopica is the main cause of DCL, which is characterized by chronicity and a poor response to conventional leishmaniasis treatments, like the antimonials but pentamdine appears more promising (8). Although in most cases the cutaneous lesions are self-healing, recovery time may last 2 to 5 years (2). DCL occurs mostly on the face (8) but oronasal mucocutaneous disease has also been documented (9).

In L. major infections, the ulcero-crusted form was the most frequent clinical form and occurs mainly on the lower extremities (10). The ulcers usually necrotize rapidly and multiple wet sores and severe inflammation are common and are slow to heal. Self-healing occurs in more than half of the patients within 2–8 months (2). L. major may also manifest as for mucocutaneous, lupoid, and sporotricoid forms.

L. tropica is common in the Eastern Mediterranean, Middle East, North India, Afghanistan, and northeast and South Africa (11). In patients infected by L. tropica, dry papular or dry ulcerative types are often observed (12) usually on the face and other exposed areas. A superficial spreading form, called leishmaniasis recidivans (LR), which presents as new lesions around an old L. tropica scar, and the plaque form lupoid leishmaniasis are predominantly caused by L. tropica (13, 14). L. tropica responds well to the antimonials and miltefosine (based on small case series) but LR is less responsive (13, 15). Without specific treatment, self-healing is generally longer compared to L. major and may last up to 1 year or more (2). Several cases of kala-azar by L. tropica have been reported from several countries, including India and Iran (16, 17), illustrating its propensity for invasive pathogenicity.

In recent years, there has been a substantial change in the distribution of L. tropica and L. major in Iran and its neighbors, which has challenged the prevention, control, and treatment of CL in this region. Climate change, notably drought in Iran and neighboring countries, the civil wars in Syria and Iraq, and the unstable political situation in Afghanistan have all contributed to the changes in the distribution of the disease in this endemic area of CL. Accordingly, we decided to review in detail the situation of OWCL in our region, which is one of the most important leishmaniasis foci in the world.

The Geographical Characteristics of CL in Iran

Iran, a country of more than 80 million people, lies in the heart of the Middle East, bordered by Azerbaijan, Armenia, Turkmenistan, and the Caspian Sea in the north; Afghanistan and Pakistan in the east; the Persian Gulf and the Oman Sea in the south; Iraq in the west; and Turkey in the northwest. Northern and western Iran are covered by the Zagros and Alborz mountain ranges, respectively, and the rest of the country is covered by forests, plains, and large deserts.

VL and CL are endemic in Iran. VL is endemic in certain regions of the country, notably the northwest and southwest and several small confined regions in central, western, and southeast Iran (1820). A new endemic focus has been reported recently in the northeast (21). VL is caused mostly by L. infantum and a small number of cases have been due to L. tropica (22).

CL is widely distributed in Iran and has been reported in 25 of 31 Iran provinces in central, west, southwest, south, southeast, east, and northeast regions (2329).

There are two forms of CL in Iran, ZCL caused by L. major and ACL caused by L. tropica. The main animal reservoirs for L. major infection are desert rodents, including Rhombomys opimus (great gerbil), Tatera indica (Indian gerbil or antelope rat), Meriones libycus (libyan jird), M. persicus (Persian jird), M. hurrianae (Indian desert jird), and Nesokia indica (short-tailed bandicoot) (4, 30, 31).

Therefore, L. major infection is mostly endemic in rural and arid areas and is transmitted mostly by Phlebotomus papatasi; however, urban foci in northeast, central, southeast, and southwest Iran are well documented as well as the reporting of sporadic cases.

By contrast, L. tropica is transmitted between humans and no animal reservoir host has been confirmed in Iran; however, it has been isolated rarely from dogs in this country (32). Phlebotomus sergenti sandfly is the main L. tropica vector in Iran and throughout the Middle East (33), and the ideal breeding conditions include semi-arid (annual precipitation: 226 mm) and more temperate (annual mean temperature 16.4°C) regions (34). ACL is endemic in the larger Iranian cities, including Kerman, Shiraz, Isfahan, Tehran, Mashhad, and some smaller cities such as Bam.

Data suggest overall that OWCL incidence rates have been decreasing in recent years from 37/100,000 in 2007 to 27/100,000 in 2010 and 22/100,000 in 2013 but, simultaneously, it seems that the distribution of L. tropica has expanded to new foci (29, 35).

The epidemiology and geographical distribution of CL in different parts of Iran are presented below.

Distribution of CL and Related Causative Agents in Iran (Figure 1)

South–Southeastern Iran

The highest annual occurrence of CL in Kerman province in south–southeast Iran is reported from well-known ACL foci in Bam and Kerman counties, with 1787 and 369 cases in 2008–2009, respectively, followed by Jiroft (n = 136), Baft (n = 67), Sirjan (n = 41), Shahre-Babak (n = 38), Anbarabad (n = 27), and Roodbare-Jonoob (24). Sharifi et al. (36) conducted a cross-sectional survey in Kerman province, using PCR to identify the Leishmania species causing CL; all samples from Bam, Kerman, Jiroft, Shahre-Babak, Anbarabad, and Roodbare-Jonoob were identified as L. tropica, and only nine (4.4%) cases of L. major were detected in Baft and Sirjan districts. Phylogenetic studies showed a high degree of homogeneity among L. tropica strains in southeast Iran (37). Hormozgan, other southeast Iranian province, has been shown to be a major foci of L. major; e.g., a subsample of 18 of 40 ulcers were all found to be identified as L. major in a study in Jask county (38).

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1. Province-based distribution of ACL and ZCL in Iran. ACL is confined to one or some counties in each province that was not shown here. The maps were generated based on the shape file layers of provinces of Iran and neighboring countries obtained from the DIVA-GIS website (http://www.diva-gis.org/gdata) by using ArcGIS version 10.1 (http://www.esri.com/arcgis).

Southwest

Shiraz, the capital of Fars province, is an old established city and was the capital of the Zandieh Kingdom from 1751 to 1794. The city has long been recognized as endemic for ACL but no DNA-based molecular data have characterized the species until 2016. In one study, ACL was detected in the old and central parts of the city while L. major was reported in suburbs (27). Bushehr province is a known focus of L. major causing ZCL in southwest Iran (39), but a small study in Bushehr, the provincial capital, identified L. tropica in 6/8 CL patients (40). There are no data on the Leishmania species in the small province of Kohgiloyeh and Boyerahmad but a geospatial information systems (GIS)-based modeling study suggests a ZCL cycle in this part of southwest Iran (41).

Central Iran

Yazd city, the provincial capital of Yazd province, is in close proximity to vast deserts of “Kavir-e-Loot,” and is highly endemic for ZCL and has a low burden of ACL; one study reported an ACL rate of 0.2% in patients aged 6–16 years (42). In addition to Yazd city, Ardakan and Bafgh counties are also predominantly ZCL (24, 43). Yazd province was predicted as a potential hot spot for CL by spatial modeling (44).

Isfahan city in Isfahan province is another Old Iranian city and was the capital from 1598 to 1722 during the Safavieh kingdom. The “Zayandeh rood” river that originates from the western Zagros mountain range passes through the city and irrigates the gardens and fields in and around the city. Although Isfahan is known as a city for ACL (45), L. major has been found in the suburbs (28).

Several rural districts of Isfahan province are known to be the most important foci of ZCL in Iran. In 2007/2008, a new ZCL focus was found in the Aran-o-Bidgol region; L. major was detected in 10/14 cases and L. tropica was detected in the remaining 4. R. opimus was the reservoir and P. papatasi was identified as the vector (46).

Tehran, the current capital of Iran, has been known traditionally as an important ACL focus (47), but we could not find any molecular studies investigating the Leishmania species in CL patients. Recently, ZCL cases were detected in Pakdasht county in Tehran province (27) and L. major has been reported from Semnan and Qom provinces in central Iran (23, 48).

Eastern Iran

Karamian et al. (49) reported an emerging focus of ACL in Birjand county in South Khorasan province where L. tropica was identified in 89% (n = 51/57) of urban cases and 91% (n = 21/23) of ACL patients were rural dwellers. L. major was also detected in both urban and rural regions. In another study in 2016, ACL was also dominant (n = 55/60) in this county. In eastern Iran, L. tropica showed high genetic similarity with southeastern strains and may have originated from the southeast region (28).

Western Iran

Khuzestan province is endemic for ZCL and had an overall prevalence rate of 37.39/100,000. Recently, L. tropica has been detected in a minority of patients with prevalence rates ranging from 3 to 10%, including in the ancient city of Shush (10% rate) in northern Khuzestan (50, 51). Data in 2013 from the mountainous province of Lorestan showed a predominance of L. tropica; overall, 72% (45/64) of local CL patients were infected by L. tropica, notably from Poldokhtar (37/43, 86%) and Kouhdasht (4/5, 80%). In Noorabad (Delfan), only 1 and 9 of 10 patients were infected with L. tropica and L. major, respectively (52).

Kermanshah province, which borders Iraq to the east, had an overall CL prevalence rate of 7.4/100,000, with most cases (47%) coming from Ghasr-e-Shirin county (on the Iran Iraq border) where the prevalence was 264.5/100,000 (53). Most (84–89%) CL cases in Kermanshah province are caused by L. major (54, 55). Small studies have also found L. tropica in Kermanshah city and Sarpole-Zahab (2/6 isolates), while seven and five isolates from Ghasr-e-Shirin and Islamabad-e-Gharb, respectively, were L. major (54).

Ilam province, sandwiched between Kermanshah and Khuzestan provinces and Iraq, is also endemic for L. major. Two studies in Ilam and Mehran counties showed that all CL cases (n = 61/61 and n = 92/92, respectively) were infected by L. major (56, 57).

Northern Iran

One study in 2010 reported 62 CL cases from different health centers in Mazandaran province but did not report the species (58). However, L. major was detected from most (98.4%, 23/125) CL patients in the Turkman sahra region in Golestan province (prevalence rate of 32.90/100,000 in 2013), which is a well-known focus for CL (29, 59).

Northeastern Iran

Khorasn-Razavi province is an area of hyper-endemic CL that had a prevalence rate of 64/100,000 in 2013 (30). Mashhad city, the capital of the province, is a long-standing ACL endemic focus and a recent study reconfirmed the predominance (10:1) of ACL over ZCL in 94 patients (60). In another study of 164 CL cases from Torghabe-Shandiz, southwest of Mashhad city, all patients were infected by L. tropica (61). Also, 10/12, 20/23, 38/49, and 53/60 CL patients from Bardaskan, Gonabad, Kashmar, and Torbat-e-Heydarieh cities and counties, respectively, which are located in the central and southern regions of this province, were infected with L. tropica (62, 63).

In Sarakhs, a city in the center of Sarakhs county in the northeastern Khorasan Razavi, 12 of 62 CL patients were infected by L. tropica and 5/12 patients had not traveled to ACL endemic areas, suggesting local transmission of ACL (64).

North Khorasan has been endemic for ZCL for decades with a prevalence rate of 50/100,000 (65). L. tropica was only detected in 5% (2/43) of sampled patients in this province and 95% of cases were found as ZCL (66).

Phylogenetic studies showed that northeastern L. tropica strains were genetically distinct from southeast–east Iranian strains but had high genetic similarity with some strains of southwest Iran (28).

L. tropica and VL

Although L. tropica is a well-recognized cause of CL, it has rarely been associated with VL. Since the first reported case from Kenya (67), additional reports have emerged in American soldiers deployed in Iraq (68), and patients from Iran and India (16, 69, 70). Moreover, canine VL due to L. tropica has also been described in Iran and Morocco (32, 71).

In Iran, viscerotropic disease was first reported in 2006 in a patient from southwestern Iran, and more cases have since been reported from several regions in Iran (23, 69). The frequencies of L. tropica-associated VL were 1.4% in 1993–1994 (69); 9% of bone marrow samples in patients were from southeast provinces (72) and 14% of patients were from southwest Iran (17).

Distribution of CL and Related Causative Agents in the Neighboring Countries

Turkey

Turkey, which borders northwestern Iran, is one of the main foci of L. tropica in the Middle East. Aside from L. tropica, L. infantum causes CL in some foci (73), while L. major accounts for few CL cases (74).

The vast majority of CL patients (99%) are reported from the southeastern Anatolia region (SE-AR) and the southern Mediterranean region (MR) (75). Sanliurfa province in SE-AR borders Syria and is a highly endemic area and responsible for more than 50% of the CL burden in Turkey (Figure 2). Other CL-affected provinces include Diarbakir (SE-AR), and several MR provinces, Adana, Osmaniye, Hatay, Diarbakir, and Mersin/Icel. Low CL endemic provinces include Kahramanmaras, Antalya, Aydin, Kayseri, Nigde, and Mus provinces (73).

FIGURE 2
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Figure 2. Distribution of CL types in Turkey.

Based on the molecular species identification, L. tropica was reported from Sanliurfa and Diarbakir (southeast); Nigde (MR, south); Izmir, Aydin, and Mugla (ER, southwest); Bingol (east); Konya (Central Anatolia region, south-central); and Adana and Hatay (south), while L. infantum was known as the main species in Hatay province and reported from one patient in Osmaniye (south) (7681). L. major has also been reported in small numbers in Mus, Hatay, Adana, Sanlirufa, and Antalya (74, 82, 83). The presence of L. major in southern Turkey is due to the arrival of Syrian refugees since 2011 to these areas where L. major has not been identified previously (83).

There is high L. tropica heterogeneity in Turkey with distinct clades (8486). There are genetic similarities between northwest Iranian L. infantum strains and hybrid strains of L. infantum/L. donovani in Cukurova in southeast Turkey (17). The recent arrival of refugees from Syria will add additional genetic heterogeneity to the L. tropica genetic pool in Turkey (86). Aside from humans, L. tropica, L. major, and L. infantum have been isolated frequently in cats in Turkey and may be influenced by different ecological cycles (87, 88).

Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia is another important focus of CL (89), with most cases occurring in southwest, central, and eastern parts of the country. L. tropica is mainly endemic in Aseer province in the southwest (90) while L. major is reported from Hail, Al-Hasa, Eastern, and the Riyadh provinces (91, 92).

Areas of mixed ACL and ZCL occur in Al-Madinah (91) and Al-Baha (93) provinces, the Taif region of Makkah provinces (94) in the southwest and Al-Qasim province in central Saudi (93). CL is declining and reported at low frequencies (mean 1.6–16.6 cases annually from 2006 to 2012) or sporadically in Tabooq, Jazan, Najran Al-Jouf, and northern borders (Figure 3) (95).

FIGURE 3
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Figure 3. Distribution of CL types in Saudi Arabia.

Each year, tens of thousands of pilgrims from Iran and other CL endemic countries travel to Al Madinah and Al Makkah for the holy Haj pilgrimage and usually stay for 12 to 30 days. This population may become infected with Saudi strains of L. tropica and L. major and also contribute new strains of CL to the local population. One study reported that the internal transcriber spacer (ITS) gene of L. major isolates from Al Madinah were 100% concordant with some Iranian L. major strains (96).

Iraq

Iraq borders Iran, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia. CL has been prevalent in all parts of country except in the three northeastern provinces of Sulaymaniyah, Dahuk, and Arbil (97). L. tropica is prevalent in the suburbs of major cities such as Baghdad and Mosul and L. major is reported from different regions throughout the country, although no clear species typing has been reported for most regions (Figure 4) (98). The Wasit governorate is one of the most important CL endemic areas in Iraq where the L. majorL. tropica ratio is 3:2 (99, 100). Wasit borders the western Iranian provinces of Ilam, Kermanshah, Khuzestan, and Lorestan, which harbor mostly L. major, and is on a main route to Karbala province, where millions of Iranian pilgrims travel annually. We could not find any phylogenetic studies of Iraqi L. tropica but it is likely that there are shared genotypes between eastern Iraq and western Iran. A genetic study of CL in Iraq identified L. major as the cause of a CL outbreak in the Garmian region in Sulaymaniyeh province from where there are no previous cases of CL (101). Garmian is close to Ghasr-e-Shirin county in Kermanshah province, Iran, a known focus of L. major (54). Moreover, the phylogenetic analysis of the Iraqi L. major showed a close genetic relationship of L. major from Ghasr-e-Shirin (101).

FIGURE 4
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Figure 4. Distribution of CL types in Iraq.

Pakistan

Pakistan, the southeast neighbor of Iran, is endemic for both ACL and ZCL. L. tropica is widely distributed in different parts of all provinces in this country, but notable areas of high endemicity include the Afghan refugee camps in northwest Pakistan (102), the west–northwest province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province (5.17%), which borders Afghanistan, and Baluchistan province, the south-SW province bordering Iran (103). L. tropica is also found in Punjab and Sind provinces. The main focus of L. major is Balochistan (104) and central parts of Sind province (Figure 5) (105) where it is mostly a disease in the plains whereas L. tropica is prevalent in mountainous regions and the cities (104, 106).

FIGURE 5
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Figure 5. Distribution of CL types in Pakistan. The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province was assumed the areas under N.W.F.P and F.A.T.A regions.

One genetic study revealed low genetic polymorphism for L. tropica from Balochistan and Sind (104). West Afghanistan (Herat province) and east (South Khorasan) and southeast (Kerman province) Iran are the main L. tropica foci in close proximity to Pakistan and showed higher homogeneity alongside central Iran isolates in comparison to other Iran's L. tropica foci (11, 28). There has not been a direct genetic comparison between Pakistan and Indian L. tropica, but interestingly, there is genetic similarity between southeast Iranian and Indian L. tropica strains (107), which raises the possibility that there may be a Pakistan–India genetic link.

Afghanistan

Afghanistan, another country on Iran's eastern border, is well known as a high L. tropica endemic country. The main foci are Kabul city and province, Herat, Badakhshan, and Kandahar with lesser burdens in Kunduz and Balkh provinces. The ACL rate in Kabul province is the highest in the country with a reported prevalence rate of 21% (108, 109). In Herat province, L. tropica accounts for 96 to 98% of CL patients (11, 110) and shares genetic characteristics with east and southeast Iranian strains (11, 111). Badakhshan and Kandahar provinces border Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Baluchistan provinces of Pakistan, respectively, but there are no genetic comparative studies of L. tropica.

L. major is reported as the minority species in Herat, Badakhshan, and Kandahar (112114), but is more commonly found in Balkh and Kunduz provinces in northern Afghanistan along the border with Tajikistan (113). CL was reported from Parwan province in central Afghanistan but no data on the CL type has been published (Figure 6) (112). Afghanistan has suffered from political instability and periods of civil wars for decades, and a comprehensive view on the situation of CL in this country is not possible based on the existing data.

FIGURE 6
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Figure 6. Distribution of CL types in Afghanistan.

Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan, Iran's northeastern neighbor, has been known historically as an ACL endemic country (115). The town of Ashkabad was an important focus but following concerted vector control efforts against the sandfly, the incidence of ACL fell but appears to be making a comeback (116, 117). Between 2000 and 2009, 1562 cases of CL were reported in Turkmenistan, mostly in the southern and eastern parts of the country bordering Iran and Afghanistan (118). L. major is also reported from time to time in the local population and travelers (117, 119).

Syria

Recent years of conflict in Syria and the migration of large numbers of Syrian refugees to other countries have substantially affected the situation of leishmaniasis in the Middle East. By 1960, the prevalence of CL in Syria was limited to the two endemic regions of Aleppo (north) and Damascus (south) of Syria. In 2010, before the onset of the civil war, the incidence of CL was estimated at 23,000 cases a year (120), while after the onset of the war, the incidence of the disease almost doubled to 41,000 cases in 2013 (121). L. tropica-associated ACL is the main form of CL in Aleppo, whereas in Damascus, it is L. major ZCL (120). Overall, studies report that most cases of CL (about 90%) are caused by L. tropica (122). In 2009 (precivil war), of the 51,119 reported cases of CL in Syria, Jordan, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia, some 90.7% of cases were reported from Syria, making Syria the highest burden country for ACL in the region (123). Displacement of Syrian refugees to neighboring countries such as Lebanon, Iraq, Jordan, and Turkey has led to outbreaks of CL and altered the local epidemiology (124). In 2012, Saroufim et al. (125) sampled 948 Syrian patients residing in the refugee camps in Lebanon and reported that 85% of them were infected with L. tropica and 15% by L. major. According to the Lebanese Ministry of Health reports, only 6 cases of CL in Lebanon were reported between 2000 and 2012, while in 2011, 1033 new cases were reported; some 97% were Syrian refugees (124). Moreover, Syrian refugees have carried L. major and L. donovani to Turkey, two species that are not endemic to Turkey (83). Table 1 briefly shows the distribution of ACL and ZCL in the mentioned countries.

TABLE 1
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Table 1. Distribution of ACL and ZCL in different geographical parts of studied countries.

Discussion

Our review reconfirms that CL remains an important disease in Iran and its neighboring countries (Figure 7). In this part of the Middle East, L. major ZCL and L. tropica ACL are present throughout the region in different ecological foci and with varying ratios of the two species. Data from 2012 suggest that Syria has the highest ACL burden followed by Iran, while Iran leads the ZCL burden followed closely by Saudi Arabia (126).

FIGURE 7
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Figure 7. Distribution of CL types in the part of Middle East including Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, and Pakistan in a view.

In this geographically heterogeneous region, CL has decreased in Iran and Saudi Arabia, increased dramatically in Syria, and re-emerged in Turkey and hitherto low endemic Lebanon. CL is geographically restricted to the southern coastline of Turkey and in selected provinces in Afghanistan while being extensively distributed in Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq. Despite a reducing CL burden in Iran, new foci have merged including L. tropica, which is now reported from 10 provinces. Although L. tropica has long been known as an urban disease, it has expanded to rural areas and smaller towns in Iran (28, 127).

The relative lack of genotypic data makes it difficult to determine the patterns of spread and emergence in new foci. This is particularly important in border areas where traditionally there is much freedom of movement of populations. Phylogenetic data from Iran suggest that CL strains from SE Iran are related to strains from Herat in western Afghanistan, and strains from northwest Iran related to strains from SE Turkey (11, 28).

Moreover, the opening of the border between Iran and Iraq appears to have played an important role in the spread and the transmission of Leishmania strains between the two countries (128). High genetic similarity between a newly emerged Iraqi L. major strain and an Iranian strain support this hypothesis (101). As a vector-borne disease with two predominant vectors, P. papatasi (ZCL) and P. sergenti (ACL), and animal and human reservoirs, respectively, multiple factors will affect disease prevalence and epidemic proneness that will be favor one species over another or be common to both. Climate and ecology are particularly important.

Our investigations show that the risk of CL declines with increasing northern latitude, consistent with the findings of Alvar et al. (118) who reported the number of CL cases of 99, 17, and 0/year in Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, and Armenia; all of these countries are north of Iran. Given the nature of the CL life cycle, Ready (129) suggested that climate change affects the distribution of leishmaniasis either directly by the effect of temperature on the development of the parasite in the sandfly, or indirectly by affecting the distribution and density of the vector species; added to these factors are the social and economic changes in human interaction with the transmission cycle. Long-term climate change has been shown to spread sandfly species to areas not previously observed (130), e.g., climate warming has caused sandflies to migrate to the high altitudes of the Atlas Mountains in Morocco (131).

The density of P. papatasi, a vector of L. major, increases with the aridity, which, in turn, occurs in response to global warming. Cross and Hyams have predicted that a 1 to 5°C increase in ambient temperature due to global warming will lead to the geographical spread of P. papatasi in the Middle East and an extension of the L. major transmission season to become perennial in Saudi Arabia (132). Currently, in Saudi Arabia, P. papatasi thrives best in the summer months and peak indoor activity occurs in May and peak density is seen in the late evening (10–11 p.m.); by winter, its population decreases drastically but starts to pick up in early spring in March (133). Martin-Sanchez et al. (134) have suggested that global warming has a greater effect on disease transmission rather than an increase in sandfly density. The effect of climate and ecology is illustrated well from studies in ZCL provinces of Iran where favorable conditions included mildly sloping hills of limited elevation, flat lands, irrigated farmlands, and moderate degrees of rainfall (41, 135). Consistent findings are reported by Ramezankhani et al. (135) who also report that lower wind speeds of <14 m/s were associated with increased disease incidence, independent of other climatic and geographical factors. In Golestan, a humid province in northeast Iran, ZCL prevalence was higher in areas with the lower relative humidity (136), whereas in Fars province, continued drought was associated with a decline in CL (137). Gerbils are important rodent reservoirs for supporting continued ZCL transmission and include M. libycus (the Libyan jird), Psammomys obesus (the fat tailed sand rat) in Saudi Arabia, M. libycus, T. indica (the Indian gerbil or antelope rat), and R. opimus (great gerbil) in Iran (133, 138). In a remarkable feat of evolution, P. papatasi has adapted to living in burrows inhabited by the fat tailed sand rat wherein high humidity and cooler temperatures are essential for sandfly survival; thus, this vector reservoir combination is a powerful driver of ZCL (139). Caves, deep cracks in walls, and dark corners in houses are also good for sandfly survival, even when with extreme temperature and aridity.

Population movements are another important risk for CL emergence, spread, and epidemics. These are related to non-immune populations moving into endemic areas or when CL-infected individuals move to a low endemic area with competent vectors; in both scenarios, population density is important. ZCL epidemics have been linked to construction workers moving into arid areas for building projects and American soldiers becoming infected in Iraq, while ACL epidemics have been reported in aid workers responding to the earthquake in Bam (SE Iran), large cities like Kabul, Afghan refugees in camps in Pakistan, and Syrian refugees in Lebanon and Turkey. Our region is well known for its religious pilgrimages and festivals, and each year, millions of pilgrims attend the Haj and Umrah in Makkah, the Arba'een pilgrimage in Karbala, Iraq, and Christmas in Jerusalem/Al Quds and Bethlehem in Israel and Palestine. This provides the opportunity for mixing of CL genotypes and non-immunes to become infected. War is a particularly effective way of causing CL epidemics not just because of population displacement but because the health infrastructure breaks down, resulting in very limited access to health care, destruction of buildings, and a deterioration in sanitation (140). The civil war in Syria is a striking example with large numbers from highly CL endemic foci causing epidemics in neighboring countries, as well as the emergence of new foci of CL caused by non-indigenous Leishmania species. Similarly, since 2014 in Iraq, population displacement has led to CL outbreaks in non-endemic areas between north and central Iraq (101). CL is found more commonly in poor and marginalized populations due to a variety of factors that include small overcrowded poorly constructed dwellings with no screens on windows, poor nutritional status, lack of personal protection against insect bites, and the presence of garbage collection areas (141).

Limited access to health and diagnosis due to lack of money or war-related infrastructure destruction and displacement exacerbate the situation.

Under-reporting of CL is probably widespread and data based on passive detection, as used in Iran (137), are significantly lower compared to active surveillance (142) because patients do not always seek treatment centers. In a study in Jordan, covering 2001–2003, the estimated incidence of CL was 47 times higher than official reports (142). Active surveillance for CL may be implemented only in emergencies such as outbreaks of the disease, like the case finding project of the Lebanese Ministry of Health, after the onset of the civil war in Syria and the influx of Syrian refugees to this country. Another issue is diagnosis. Some countries lack access to molecular techniques so species identification is impossible; thus, CL burden data are based on microscopy or the clinical description of lesions, e.g., dry or wet cutaneous lesions (109).

Proposals to Reduce the Burden of the Disease in the Region

Surveillances should be improved by determining the species of Leishmania causing CL in each region by using molecular methods. Moreover, in the map reports, the distribution of the disease should be specified based on the species of the parasite. Using GIS and performing geospatial research are advised to stratify areas based on the probability of the disease. By using these data and producing hazard maps, the disease control and prevention can be better managed. Moreover, undertaking active disease screening in suspected areas of CL especially in refugee camps and increasing access to health care to remote areas and marginalized populations and introducing free treatment of CL can be the keyways to reducing the burden of CL in this region of the world.

Conclusion

CL in the Middle East is a disease of complex interactions between parasite reservoirs, parasites, vectors, climate, ecology, political instability, poverty, and socioeconomic changes. Against this background is increasing and decreasing CL burden in different countries as well as newly emerging foci on low and high endemic countries. Effective control is challenging, must take all of these factors into account, and must adopt a multidisciplinary approach based on sound epidemiological evidence. This review sheds light on CL in our region with a focus on Iran, a country with a substantial burden.

Author Contributions

MG conceptualized and wrote the initial draft. WT and MK critically appraised and revised the manuscript. All authors reviewed and approved the final manuscript.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Dr. Zahra Kanannejad for help in the data gathering.

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Keywords: Leishmania tropica, Leishmania major, Iran, Turkey, Iraq, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria

Citation: Ghatee MA, Taylor WR and Karamian M (2020) The Geographical Distribution of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Causative Agents in Iran and Its Neighboring Countries, A Review. Front. Public Health 8:11. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.00011

Received: 14 August 2019; Accepted: 14 January 2020;
Published: 18 February 2020.

Edited by:

Herbert Leonel de Matos Guedes, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Reviewed by:

Valter Viana Andrade-Neto, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz), Brazil
Tarek Adnan Ahmad, Bibliotheca Alexandrina, Egypt
Aref Salehzadeh, Hamadan University of Medical Sciences, Iran
Mohadeseh Motamed-Jahromi, Fasa University of Medical Sciences, Iran

Copyright © 2020 Ghatee, Taylor and Karamian. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Mehdi Karamian, karamianm@yahoo.com

Disclaimer: All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.