80-year Buruli ulcer mystery solved
Thursday, 25 January, 2024
Up until very recently, scientists have been confounded by how people contract Buruli ulcer, ever since the discovery of Mycobacterium ulcerans (M. ulcerans) in the 1940s in Australia. A recent alarming surge in cases in and around Melbourne and Geelong caused this hitherto neglected tropical skin disease to become an important public health issue in Victoria, creating a pressing need for further research into what was causing the spread.
Following a concerted effort, a team of researchers has now solved the 80-year mystery. Led by University of Melbourne鈥檚 Professor Tim Stinear, Director of the at the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity (Doherty Institute), the group鈥檚 findings categorically confirm mosquitoes as the primary vectors transmitting the ulcer-causing bacteria M. ulcerans from the environment to people. Their results have been published in .
Focusing on the Mornington Peninsula, a seaside region outside of Melbourne with one of the highest incidences of Buruli ulcer in the world, the Beating Buruli in Victoria project team trapped and tested more than 65,000 mosquitoes between 2016 and 2021.
Led by the Doherty Institute at the University of Melbourne, the collaborative research team brought together partners from the Bio21 Institute, Agriculture Victoria, Austin Health, Victorian Department of Health, the Mornington Peninsular Shire, CSIRO and more.
鈥淗ow Buruli ulcer is spread to people has baffled scientists and public health experts for decades,鈥 Stinear said. 鈥淪o now that mystery is solved, with our five-year study revealing that mosquitoes transmit M. ulcerans in south-eastern Australia, making mosquito bite prevention and mosquito control obvious forms of prevention.鈥
Advanced techniques were employed in the research, including the use of forensic-level genomics.
鈥淭hanks to genome sequencing, we discovered that the genetic make-up of the bacteria M. ulcerans in mosquitoes was identical to that found in Buruli ulcer patients in the study area,鈥 said Dr Peter Mee, Research Scientist at Agriculture Victoria and one of the lead authors of the paper.
鈥淭his was a key part of a compelling body of evidence pointing to mosquitoes as the transmission link.鈥
Professor Paul Johnson, infectious diseases physician at Austin Health, said it was initially challenging to convince others that mosquitoes might be spreading Buruli ulcer.
鈥淲e long suspected mosquitoes were involved, but there is no precedence for a bacterial infection like Buruli ulcer being transmitted this way. Our team faced considerable scepticism, so we gathered irrefutable evidence to support our claim,鈥 Johnson said.
鈥淭his research is significant because we can all take simple actions, like applying insect repellent and removing stagnant water around the house, to protect the community and reduce the risk of Buruli ulcer.鈥
Over the last two decades, there has been an exponential increase in reported cases in Victoria, escalating from 12 in 2003 to 363 in 2023 鈥 the highest count to date.
The Royal Melbourne 黑料吃瓜群网鈥檚 Dr Katherine Gibney, an infectious diseases and public health physician and one of the study leads at the Doherty Institute, stressed the importance of ongoing wildlife and mosquito population monitoring 鈥 a 鈥極ne Health鈥 approach.
鈥淢aintaining this type of mosquito surveillance work could offer crucial insights into the epidemiology of Buruli ulcer in the region and inform public health interventions aimed at controlling the disease,鈥 Gibney said.
The Beating Buruli in Victoria team is in the process of rolling out a new trial aimed at reducing mosquito populations in urban areas, specifically around Brunswick West, Pascoe Vale South, Moonee Ponds and Essendon in Victoria, using state-of-the-art, environmentally friendly mosquito traps.
Victoria's Q3 median ED wait times the lowest on record
Victoria's quarter three performance data (January–March) has shown improvement across...
Irregularities in a clinician's cases prompt 15-month lookback
St Vincent's 黑料吃瓜群网 Sydney has detailed a 15-month lookback review — prompted by...
Two researchers receive $899,000 in cardiovascular funding
In heart-related news this Heart Week (5–11 May), two University of Newcastle researchers...