TY - JOUR KW - Trypanosoma cruzi KW - Leishmania KW - Bibliometrics KW - tripanosomatids research KW - Brazil AU - Bárbara Marinho AU - Izabela Mamede AU - Júlia Raspante Martins AU - André Rodrigues AU - Ana Gabrielle Batista de Melo AU - Adalberto Sales Miranda-Junior AU - Alice Rios Neto AU - Amanda Carolina da Silva Nunes AU - Bruno Carvalho Resende AU - Dáfne Oliveira AU - Darlan Oliveira da Silva AU - Frederico Gabriel de Carvalho Oliveira AU - Jéssica Duarte AU - Lorrane Diniz de Carvalho Silva AU - Wesley Roger Rodrigues Ferreira AU - Daniela De Laet-Souza AU - Andrea Mara Macedo AU - Glória Regina Franco AU - Carlos Renato Machado AB -

BACKGROUND

Trypanosomatid infections such as Chagas disease (CD) and leishmaniasis remain major public-health concerns. Brazil has a long tradition in this field, yet a consolidated, country-level view of outputs, impact and collaboration patterns is useful to guide scientific policy.


OBJECTIVES 

To characterise Brazilian scientific production on Trypanosoma cruziLeishmania and Trypanosoma brucei (2010-2021), describing temporal trends, regional contributions, collaboration networks and journal impact.


METHODS 

We performed a bibliometric analysis of PubMed records retrieved with Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) for each pathogen/disease pair, covering publications from 1 January 2010 to 31 December 2021 (search date: 21 July 2022). Data items included article type, year, journal, author affiliations (countries/institutions) and, for Brazil, the geographical region of the corresponding author. Descriptive statistics and visualisations were generated in R.
 

FINDINGS 

From 21,713 records, 6,478 were affiliated to Brazil. Brazil contributed a substantial share of the global literature, particularly for T. cruzi (≈40%) and Leishmania (≈30%). Within Brazil, output increased over time with growing participation from the north and northeast, alongside expanding inter-institutional and international collaborations. Most publications appeared in higher-impact journals (Q1/Q2), with recent gains in Q1 outputs in historically under-represented regions. Original research predominated over reviews across the period.


MAIN CONCLUSIONS 

Brazilian trypanosomatid research shows sustained growth, increasing regional dispersion and rising international engagement, with a strong presence in high-impact journals. Continued support for collaborative networks and equitable funding across regions could further enhance national and global impact.

BT - JOURNAL OF MICROBES & THEIR VECTORS CAUSING HUMAN INFECTIONS LA - ENG M3 - Article N2 -

BACKGROUND

Trypanosomatid infections such as Chagas disease (CD) and leishmaniasis remain major public-health concerns. Brazil has a long tradition in this field, yet a consolidated, country-level view of outputs, impact and collaboration patterns is useful to guide scientific policy.


OBJECTIVES 

To characterise Brazilian scientific production on Trypanosoma cruziLeishmania and Trypanosoma brucei (2010-2021), describing temporal trends, regional contributions, collaboration networks and journal impact.


METHODS 

We performed a bibliometric analysis of PubMed records retrieved with Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) for each pathogen/disease pair, covering publications from 1 January 2010 to 31 December 2021 (search date: 21 July 2022). Data items included article type, year, journal, author affiliations (countries/institutions) and, for Brazil, the geographical region of the corresponding author. Descriptive statistics and visualisations were generated in R.
 

FINDINGS 

From 21,713 records, 6,478 were affiliated to Brazil. Brazil contributed a substantial share of the global literature, particularly for T. cruzi (≈40%) and Leishmania (≈30%). Within Brazil, output increased over time with growing participation from the north and northeast, alongside expanding inter-institutional and international collaborations. Most publications appeared in higher-impact journals (Q1/Q2), with recent gains in Q1 outputs in historically under-represented regions. Original research predominated over reviews across the period.


MAIN CONCLUSIONS 

Brazilian trypanosomatid research shows sustained growth, increasing regional dispersion and rising international engagement, with a strong presence in high-impact journals. Continued support for collaborative networks and equitable funding across regions could further enhance national and global impact.

PY - 2025 SP - 1 EP - 9 T2 - JOURNAL OF MICROBES & THEIR VECTORS CAUSING HUMAN INFECTIONS TI - Trypanosomatid research in Brazil: a systematic analysis of regional and temporal trends UR - https://memorias.ioc.fiocruz.br/article/14314?task=artigo.download VL - 120 ER -