| Literature DB >> 21311587 |
.
Abstract
Different challenges are presented by the variety of malaria transmission environments present in the world today. In each setting, improved control for reduction of morbidity is a necessary first step towards the long-range goal of malaria eradication and a priority for regions where the disease burden is high. For many geographic areas where transmission rates are low to moderate, sustained and well-managed application of currently available tools may be sufficient to achieve local elimination. The research needs for these areas will be to sustain and perhaps improve the effectiveness of currently available tools. For other low-to-moderate transmission regions, notably areas where the vectors exhibit behaviours such as outdoor feeding and resting that are not well targeted by current strategies, new interventions that target predictable features of the biology/ecologies of the local vectors will be required. To achieve elimination in areas where high levels of transmission are sustained by very efficient vector species, radically new interventions that significantly reduce the vectorial capacity of wild populations will be needed. Ideally, such interventions should be implemented with a one-time application with a long-lasting impact, such as genetic modification of the vectorial capacity of the wild vector population.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21311587 PMCID: PMC3026704 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1000401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Vector control interventions required for sustained control and for eradication.
| Sustained Control | Eradication |
| Better vector monitoring and evaluation information to target interventions | |
| Effective insecticides for LLINs and/or IRS | Effective insecticides for LLINs and/or IRS |
| Resistance monitoring and management | Resistance monitoring and management |
| Vector identification and incrimination | Vector identification and incrimination |
| Appropriate integrated vector management | Appropriate integrated vector management |
| Targeted interventions for outdoor biting and resting mosquitoes | |
| Novel approaches to reduce permanently the high vectorial capacity of major vectors (e.g., genetic modification) | |
| Effective consumer products for vector control |
Figure 1A formalized analytical framework for the collection, analysis, and central presentation of relevant information.
M&E, monitoring and evaluation. Image credit: Fusión Creativa.
Examples of novel tool development and intended objectives.
| Sustained-Use Interventions | Time-Limited Interventions | ||
| Category | Objective | Category | Objective |
| Insecticides and related chemical agents (synthetic and natural [“bio-prospecting”]) for environmental, dwelling, and systemic applications (humans or animals) | Control, elimination | Biological or chemical agents that affect age structure (decrease extrinsic incubation period, for example, | Control, elimination, eradication |
| House design to impede vector access and sustainability | Control, elimination | Genetic approaches to reduce adult longevity (“death-on infection” genes killing only those mosquitoes that become infected) | Control, elimination, eradication |
| Biological agents (plant, fungi, algae, predators, niche competitors, insect viruses, and other pathogens) for population suppression | Control, elimination | Biological agents targeting pathogens, for example, symbiotic organisms engineered to kill pathogens (paratransgenesis) | Control, elimination, eradication |
| Ecological/environmental modification (source reduction) targeting sites for breeding (oviposition), subadult development, and adult resting sites | Control, elimination | Genetic approaches targeting vector competence | Control, elimination, eradication |
| Chemical attractants/repellent agents (synthetic and natural [“bio-prospecting”]) for dwelling and personal applications that would target both indoor and outdoor biting | Control, elimination | ||
Figure 2A scheme for the analysis of the development status of the different interventions; similar schemes are used in the commercial development of drugs, for example.
Image credit: Fusión Creativa.