| Literature DB >> 26259942 |
Jan E Conn, Douglas E Norris, Martin J Donnelly, Nigel W Beebe, Thomas R Burkot, Mamadou B Coulibaly, Laura Chery, Alex Eapen, John B Keven, Maxwell Kilama, Ashwani Kumar, Steve W Lindsay, Marta Moreno, Martha Quinones, Lisa J Reimer, Tanya L Russell, David L Smith, Matthew B Thomas, Edward D Walker, Mark L Wilson, Guiyun Yan.
Abstract
The unprecedented global efforts for malaria elimination in the past decade have resulted in altered vectorial systems, vector behaviors, and bionomics. These changes combined with increasingly evident heterogeneities in malaria transmission require innovative vector control strategies in addition to the established practices of long-lasting insecticidal nets and indoor residual spraying. Integrated vector management will require focal and tailored vector control to achieve malaria elimination. This switch of emphasis from universal coverage to universal coverage plus additional interventions will be reliant on improved entomological monitoring and evaluation. In 2010, the National Institutes for Allergies and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) established a network of malaria research centers termed ICEMRs (International Centers for Excellence in Malaria Research) expressly to develop this evidence base in diverse malaria endemic settings. In this article, we contrast the differing ecology and transmission settings across the ICEMR study locations. In South America, Africa, and Asia, vector biologists are already dealing with many of the issues of pushing to elimination such as highly focal transmission, proportionate increase in the importance of outdoor and crepuscular biting, vector species complexity, and "sub patent" vector transmission. © The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26259942 PMCID: PMC4574272 DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.15-0009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Trop Med Hyg ISSN: 0002-9637 Impact factor: 2.345
Figure 1.Location of the 33 field sites across 10 International Centers of Excellence in Malaria Research (ICEMR) (in red). The field sites (yellow circles) are numbered consecutively and are described in Table 1.
Vector biology and ecology data from ICEMR field sites
| ICEMR regional center | Specific site | Major vector(s) | Trap type | Primary behaviors (exo/endo/phagic/philic) | Main control method | Transmission seasonality | EIR (per year) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malawi | Blantyre District (urban) | CDC, ASP | Endophagic, endophilic (indirect evidence) | LLIN | Rainy season (November–April), low transmission rest of year | N/A | ||
| Thyolo District (rural highland) | CDC, ASP | Endophagic, endophilic (indirect evidence) | LLIN | Rainy season (November–April), low transmission rest of year | N/A | |||
| Chikwawa District (rural lowland) | CDC, ASP | Endophagic, endophilic (indirect evidence) | LLIN | Perennial, one annual rainy season | N/A | |||
| West Africa | The Gambia | HLC, CDC | Primarily endophagic and endophilic | LLIN, IRS | Rainy season (August–November) | Peak of 23/month | ||
| Gambissara (Upper River) | ||||||||
| Senegal | HLC | Primarily exo/ endophagic and endophilic | LLIN | Rainy season peak (August–December) | Peak of 5/month | |||
| Medina Fall (Thiès) | ||||||||
| Mali | HLC | Primarily endophagic and endophilic; more recently comparable frequency indoors and outdoors | LLIN | Rainy season peak (July–December) | Peak of 51/month | |||
| Dangassa | ||||||||
| Koila Bamana (Dioro) | HLC | Same as Dangassa | LLIN | Virtually perennial; rainy season peak plus irrigation (August–May) | Rainy season peak = 5/month | |||
| South Africa | Zambia | CDC, PSC, backpack aspirator | Not evaluated | LLIN, IRS | All year with seasonal fluctuations | 8–108 for | ||
| Nchelenge District | ||||||||
| Choma District | CDC, HLC, PSC, cattle-baited trap | Exophagic, exophilic | LLIN | Single rainy season | 0 | |||
| Zimbabwe | CDC, PSC | Not evaluated | LLIN, IRS | Single rainy season | 0–7 for | |||
| Mutasa District | ||||||||
| East Africa | Uganda | HLC, PSC/exit trap, CDC | Primarily endophagic, endophilic | ITN | Perennial, two annual rainy seasons | 4 | ||
| Jinja District | ||||||||
| Kanungu District | HLC, PSC/exit trap, CDC | Primarily endophagic, endophilic | ITN | Perennial, two annual rainy seasons | 27 | |||
| Tororo District | HLC, PSC/exit trap, CDC | Primarily endophagic, endophilic | ITN | Perennial, two annual rainy seasons | 125 | |||
| Amazonia | Peru | HLC, CDC, Shannon trap | Exophagic, exophilic | LLIN, IRS, local bed nets | Seasonal, peaks w/rainy season (March–May) | 0–86.7 | ||
| Loreto Department | ||||||||
| Madre de Dios Department | HLC, CDC, Shannon trap | Not evaluated | ITN | Perennial, peaks w/rainy season (December–February) | Too few mosquitoes to calculate | |||
| Brazil | Shannon trap | Primarily exophagic, exophilic | ITN, IRS | Seasonal; minor peaks during dry season (May–September) | N/A | |||
| Granada, ∼25-year-old rural settlement, Acrelandia | ||||||||
| Remansinho, ∼8-year-old settlement, Acrelandia | Shannon trap | Exo/endophagic, primarily exophilic | ITN | Perennial | N/A | |||
| Latin America | Colombia | HLC | Exophagic, exophilic | LLIN | Perennial | Three localities for | ||
| Tierralta | ||||||||
| Buenaventura | HLC | Exophagic, exophilic | LLIN | Perennial, modest peaks March–April, July–September | Too few mosquitoes to calculate | |||
| Tumaco | HLC | Exophagic, exophilic | LLIN, larvicide | Perennial, main peak March–April; minor peak July | 2.85 for | |||
| South Asia | India | Mosquito magnet, CDC | Endophagic, exophilic; endophagic, endophilic | Larvicide (temephos), BTI, larvivorous fish (guppy) | All year, peaks during rainy season | 2.35 overall for | ||
| Goa | ||||||||
| Wardha | Hand catch | Endophilic, endophagic | IRS | All year, peaks during rainy season | Unreported | |||
| Ranchi | Hand catch | Endophilic, endophagic | LLIN, IRS | Unreported | ||||
| Assam | CDC | Exophilic, exo/endophagic; exo/endophagic | LLIN, ITN, IRS | All year, peaks during rainy season | Unreported | |||
| Chennai | IRC, PSC | Endo/exophilic (variable; mainly based on microenvironmental conditions) endophagic; exophagic during summer | Larvicide (temephos) | Perennial, mesoendemic, southwest and northeast monsoon (predominantly NE) | Unreported | |||
| Raurkela | IRC | IRS, LLIN | Perennial, meso-hyperendemic, peak in winter | 7.3–127 seasonally dependent | ||||
| Nadiad | IRC, PSC | Endophilic, endophagic | Larvicide, biological control, IRS, LLIN, ITN | Seasonal, hypoendemic (unstable malaria) | 0.05–0.21 | |||
| Southeast Asia | China | CDC aspirator | Exo/endophilic; strongly zoophilic, exophagic | ITN, IRS | Perennial, one rainy season | 0.10 | ||
| Yingjiang County, Yunnan Province | ||||||||
| Myanmar | CDC | Exo/endophilic; strongly zoophilic, exophagic | LLIN, IRS | Perennial, one rainy season | 0.53 | |||
| Laiza, Kachin State | ||||||||
| Thailand | CDC aspirator | Exo/endophilic | LLIN, IRS | Perennial, one rainy season | 0.25 | |||
| Tha Song Yang District, Tak Province | ||||||||
| Southwest Pacific | PNG | HLC, barrier screens | Exo/endophilic | LLIN | Perennial, one to two rainy seasons | 10.1–27.8 | ||
| East Sepik Province | ||||||||
| Madang Province | HLC, barrier screens | Exo/endophilic | LLIN | Perennial, peak in rainy season | 40.8 | |||
| Solomon Islands | HLC, barrier screens | Exophilic | LLIN | Perennial, peak in rainy season | 3–44 | |||
| Central Province and Western Province |
ASP = battery powered aspirator of the Prokopack or Insectazooka type; CDC = Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; EIR = entomological inoculation rate; HLC = human landing catch; ICEMR = International Centers for Excellence in Malaria Research; IR = infection rate (in vector); IRS = indoor residual spray; IRC = indoor resting collections; LLIN = long-lasting insecticide-impregnated net; PNG = Papua New Guinea; PSC = pyrethroid spray catch; Pf = Plasmodium falciparum; Pm = Plasmodium malariae; Po = Plasmodium ovale; Pv = Plasmodium vivax; N/A = Not applicable.
Locality numbers in Column 2 correspond to numbers in Figure 1.
Malaria cases in Madre de Dios Department have steadily declined since 2011. In 2013, there were 251 cases (MINSA, Peru, 2013).
Malaria (P. vivax) is disappearing in Remansinho (2010–2013).24
Figure 2.Anopheline malaria vector species across the 10 ICEMRs. New potential vector species, detected in these or affiliated studies, are depicted in purple. In Macha, Zambia, there is not yet conclusive evidence implicating Anopheles coustani s.l. or Anopheles squamosus as vectors.