| Literature DB >> 26063216 |
Nicodem J Govella1, Sheila B Ogoma2,3, John Paliga4, Prosper P Chaki1, Gerry Killeen5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Semi-field trials using laboratory-reared Anopheles arabiensis have shown that, delivering the volatile pyrethroid transfluthrin by absorption into hessian strips, consistently provided > 99% human protective efficacy against bites for 6 months without retreating. Here the impact of this approach upon human exposure to wild populations of vectors for both malaria and filariasis under full field conditions is assessed for the first time.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26063216 PMCID: PMC4465323 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-015-0937-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1Example of a transfluthrin-treated hessian strip in use as evaluated in this study. The strip is made of fine jute fibers woven together to form sacking fabric, cut into 4 m × 0.3 m dimensions. The strip is hung 0.5 m above the ground in a square shape on four metal poles, creating a 1 m2 area around a human volunteer collecting mosquitoes by the human landing catch method
Fig. 2Absolute total numbers of mosquitoes caught and mean numbers caught per person night of catching for each experimental round of replication, as well as derived estimates for the protective efficacy of transfluthrin-treated hessian strips against bites. Left hand panels compare the absolute total and mean numbers of mosquitoes caught by human landing catch in both the treated and control group. Each data point represents one complete round of eight night of sampling with 16 person nights of capture for each of the control and treatment groups. Right hand panels present the calculated protective efficacy, which is defined in term of proportional reduction (ρ) in the number of mosquitoes caught in the test group with transfluthrin-treated strips (N ) relative to the negative control group with untreated negative control strips (N ), obtained by dividing the difference between the numbers of mosquitoes caught with treated and untreated strips by the number caught with the control strips (ρ = (N –N )/ N ). The trend lines represent the most parsimonious fitted generalized linear mixed models, which includes only strip treatment as a fixed effect in the case of Anopheles gambiae but also Poisson-linear decay of treatment effect over time in the case of Culex spp