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Arsenic Contamination of Drinking Water in India Impairs Kala-Azar Treatment

By Roberta Attanasio

Visceral leishmaniasis, known in India as kala-azar or black fever, is a parasitic disease that kills an estimated 500,000 people a year, 90 percent of them in India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Brazil and Sudan.

In India, the disease is endemic in the northeastern Indian State of Bihar – the epicenter of kala-azar in the region – and in Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal. It manifests with irregular bouts of fever, substantial weight loss, swelling of the spleen and liver, and anemia. Left untreated, kala-azar is almost always fatal, especially in children,

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), “Leishmaniasis is a poverty-related disease. It affects the poorest of the poor and is associated with malnutrition, displacement, poor housing, illiteracy, gender discrimination, weakness of the immune system and lack of resources. Leishmaniasis is also linked to environmental changes such as deforestation, building of dams, new irrigation schemes and urbanization, and the accompanying migration of non-immune people to endemic areas.”

Sandfly bloodmeal
A sandfly completing the ingestion of its bloodmeal.
Photo Credit: James Gathany, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Leishmania, the protozoan parasite that causes kala-azar, spreads to humans through the bite of infected female sandflies. No vaccine has yet been licensed to prevent infection.

Drugs to treat the disease are toxic and expensive. In Bihar, where 90% of India’s large kala-hazar burden is located, the parasite has developed resistance to one of the main treatments, a group of drugs known as antimonial preparations. Indeed, the effectiveness of the antimonial preparations is now so low that these drugs are no longer recommended in the Indian subcontinent, whereas they remain an essential part of the treatment for visceral leishmaniasis in South America and sub-Saharan Africa.

Now, researchers at the Universities of Dundee and Aberdeen in the U.K. report, in an article published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, that arsenic contamination of the water supply may have played a significant role in building the resistance of leishmania to the antimonial drugs.

In the article, the researchers state: “The Indian subcontinent is the only region where arsenic contamination of drinking water coexists with widespread resistance to antimonial drugs that are used to treat the parasitic disease visceral leishmaniasis.” The article (October 28, 2013) is entitled “Chronic exposure to arsenic in drinking water can lead to resistance to antimonial drugs in a mouse model of visceral leishmaniasis

Professor Alan Fairlamb, senior author of the article, said: ”The water supply in Bihar has been found to be affected by contamination from naturally occurring arsenic in the groundwater. What we have been able to show through experiments is that arsenic contamination of water can build resistance in Leishmania parasites to antimonial treatments.”

The researchers performed their experiments in animals. They serially passaged the leishmania parasites in mice. During the passages, mice received arsenic in drinking water at environmentally relevant levels. Results from these experiments show that after five monthly passages, the leishmania parasites become stably resistant to an antimonial preparation.

Meghan Perry, lead author of the study, said: “Arsenic contamination of the groundwater is a serious issue in Bihar. Many villagers continue to drink arsenic contaminated water as they have no alternative. Knowledge of the dangers of arsenic pollution is low and mitigation projects are not reaching all of those in need. Arsenic can lead to a myriad of health issues and our research adds to this long list. Community education and alternative drinking water sources are desperately needed.”

This new study points out an additional detrimental effect of arsenic in drinking water. Another example of adverse effect mediated by arsenic and recently demonstrated is the increase in respiratory diseases following fetal exposure.

One Comment

  • sam g

    This is a very interesting post, and I just keep wondering what the general implications for these findings are. How many times this happens for other parasites and for other toxic chemicals and we don’t even think about? The landscape of toxic chemicals keeps changing constantly, with more and more chemicals added every day and more and more contaminated sites, and how is all this changing the spread of infectious diseases, and the resistance of pathogens to whatever drugs? And what about chemicals playing a role on bacterial antibiotic resistance? Thanks to these investigators hopefully more people will think about all these interferences, toxic chemicals present everywhere interfering with our general ability to control infectious diseases.

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