# Equine trypanosomiasis, a systematic review: Disease management

**Authors:** Alexandra G. Raftery, Lauren Gummery, Karelhia Garcia, Dinesh Mohite, Paul Capewell, David Sutton

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/evj.70136 · 2025-12-22

## TL;DR

This systematic review evaluates how managing equine trypanosomiasis affects disease severity and prevalence, finding that treatments are effective but often lead to relapses and neurological complications.

## Contribution

The study provides a comprehensive systematic review of disease management strategies for equine trypanosomiasis, highlighting treatment efficacy and limitations.

## Key findings

- Trypanocides effectively clear blood parasites but clinical relapses are common in 25% of treated equines.
- Neurological signs reduce treatment efficacy, with 63% mortality in affected equines.
- Isometamidium chloride can cause a shock response in 13% of treated equines.

## Abstract

Equine trypanosomiasis is a neglected protozoal disease.

To answer the study question: In equines what are the effects of disease management of trypanosomiasis on disease severity (individual level) and disease prevalence (population level) compared to no intervention?

Systematic review.

Studies were identified that described management of naturally occurring equine trypanosomiasis in any country following ‘Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta‐analyses’ using eight international databases (1980–2022). Risk of bias was assessed using ROBINS‐I. Data synthesis was descriptive.

Thirty studies were included (9 case reports, 5 case series, 15 cohorts, 1 randomised non‐inferiority trial). Risk of bias was ‘serious’ (22/30), ‘moderate’ (7/30), ‘low’ (1/30). Heterogeneity was high. Disease severity (individual): Trypanosoma evansi: all evaluated trypanocides were effective in blood parasitaemia clearance (weak evidence). Clinical relapses were common (n = 60/241 equines treated; 25%) (strong evidence). Efficacy was poor once neurological signs were present (n = 12/19 equines; 63% mortality) (strong evidence). Trypanosoma equiperdum: a combination protocol could be curative before CNS invasion (weak evidence). Tsetse transmitted trypanosomiasis: Treatment of haemolymphatic disease with isometamidium or diminazene resulted in a positive clinical response (strong evidence). New/recrudescing infections were common in some regions (strong evidence). Trypanosoma vivax: treatment with high‐dose diminazene had a poor clinical outcome (weak evidence). Disease prevalence (population): a multifaceted control programme was effective in reducing disease prevalence (weak evidence). Early (<2 days post‐infection) treatment was more effective (weak evidence). Reported side effects were uncommon (n = 70/7888 equines; 1%) (strong evidence). Isometamidium chloride (0.5 mg/kg i.v.) can cause a shock response (13%; range 10–14; n = 14/105) (strong evidence).

Publication bias, heterogeneity, descriptive data.

Short‐term trypanocide response for haemolymphatic disease was positive but optimisation of treatment protocols is required to reduce relapse and combat neurotrypanosomiasis. Reliance on trypanocidal treatment alone is common. Side effects are rare but can be severe.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** isometamidium (PubChem CID 72452), diminazene (PubChem CID 2354), isometamidium chloride (PubChem CID 92295)
- **Species:** Trypanosoma evansi (taxon 5697), Trypanosoma equiperdum (taxon 5694), Trypanosoma vivax (taxon 5699)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** blood parasitaemia (MESH:D006402), Equine trypanosomiasis (MESH:D014352), infection (MESH:D007239), shock (MESH:D012769), protozoal disease (MESH:D020808), haemolymphatic disease (MESH:D004194), Trypanosoma evansi (MESH:D014355)
- **Chemicals:** trypanocidal (-), diminazene (MESH:D004133), Isometamidium chloride (MESH:C000702)
- **Species:** Trypanosoma vivax (species) [taxon 5699], Trypanosoma equiperdum (species) [taxon 5694], Equus caballus (domestic horse, species) [taxon 9796]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12892392/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12892392