| Literature DB >> 26242977 |
Katey D Glunt1, Ana Paula Abílio2, Quique Bassat3,4, Helder Bulo5, Allison E Gilbert6, Silvie Huijben7, Maria Nélia Manaca8, Eusebio Macete9,10, Pedro Alonso11,12, Krijn P Paaijmans13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chemical insecticides are crucial to malaria control and elimination programmes. The frontline vector control interventions depend mainly on pyrethroids; all long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) and more than 80% of indoor residual spraying (IRS) campaigns use chemicals from this class. This extensive use of pyrethroids imposes a strong selection pressure for resistance in mosquito populations, and so continuous resistance monitoring and evaluation are important. As pyrethroids have also been used for many years in the Manhiça District, an area in southern Mozambique with perennial malaria transmission, an assessment of their efficacy against the local malaria vectors was conducted.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26242977 PMCID: PMC4524426 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-0807-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Pyrethroid susceptibility of F1 generation Anopheles funestus and An. gambiae s.l. from Manhiça, as well as a laboratory colony of susceptible An. arabiensis
| Insecticide | Percent mortality (n) | |
|---|---|---|
| Treated | Control | |
|
| ||
| 0.05% Deltamethrin [ | 3.1% (97) | 0% (47) |
| 0.05% Deltamethrin [ | 9.6% (94) | 0% (47)* |
| 0.75% Permethrin [ | 25.8% (93) | 0% (47)* |
| 0.75% Permethrin [ | 12.4% (97) | 0% (53) |
| 0.05% Lambda-cyhalothrin | 5.1% (78) | 1.9% (52) |
|
| ||
| 0.05% Deltamethrin [ | 89.7% (29) | 0% (25) |
| 0.05% Deltamethrin [ | 97.5% (40) | 3.8% (26) |
|
| ||
| 0.05% Deltamethrin | 100% (54) | 3.8% (52)† |
| 0.75% Permethrin | 90.7% (56) | 3.8% (52)† |
| 0.05% Lambda-cyhalothrin | 94.3% (53) | 3.8% (52)† |
Percentage indicates percent mortality 24 h following 1 h exposure; number between parentheses indicates the number of mosquitoes tested.
Number inside square braces indicates experimental replicate.
* Shared control.
†Shared control.
Fig. 1Observed increase in pyrethroid resistance in Anopheles funestus mosquitoes in Manhiça, as measured by decreased mortality after exposure. From undetectable levels in 2002, resistance to deltamethrin and permethrin has increased drastically; in early 2014, less than one-third of exposed mosquitoes were killed by an hour-long exposure to either chemical. Resistance to lambda-cyhalothrin has reached similar levels, increasing from 40% to almost complete resistance since 2009 [11; this study, 12].
Fig. 2Mortality of Anopheles funestus 24 h after 3-min exposure to LLINs or untreated bed nets. Exposure to Olyset (permethrin, n = 97) or PermaNet 2.0 (deltamethrin, n = 96) nets did not kill significantly more mosquitoes than an untreated bed net (n = 49; p = 0.2).
Fig. 3Time-mortality relationship for Anopheles funestus mosquitoes from Manhiça, exposed to PermaNet 2.0 LLINs for durations between 3 min and 8 h. Filled symbols indicate mortality from PermaNet exposures, and mortality from untreated nets is indicated by open symbols (±1 SEM); experiment 2 points are slightly offset at each timepoint to improve visibility. Model predictions are traced by solid lines (gray = untreated net, black = PermaNet), with dashed lines at 95% prediction intervals.