| Literature DB >> 26497808 |
White Soko1,2, Moses J Chimbari3,4, Samson Mukaratirwa5.
Abstract
Malaria is a global public health problem, with about 3.2 billion people at risk of infection. The populations at risk mainly reside in Africa, Asia and America, with African populations accounting for the largest burden of the disease. In 2013, close to 198 million malaria cases were reported, leading to 584,000 deaths. Much (90 %) of the mortality rates were recorded from the World Health Organization (WHO) database in the African region and 78 % of these occurred in children under the age of five. In Zimbabwe, approximately half of the population is at risk of infection with malaria.Insecticide residual spraying (IRS) has been documented as an effective way to control malaria and has been adopted globally by the WHO and national governments. However, both insecticide resistance and climate change threaten to reverse the progress made by IRS in malaria control. Resistance has been reported in all four classes of insecticides approved by the WHO for vector control intervention. Variability of environmental temperature is suspected to complicate the situation through alteration in the genetic structure, and enzyme and protein profiles of mosquitoes. In Zimbabwe, little research has been done on the interaction between climate change, temperature variability and insecticide resistance in malarial mosquitoes over time. Such information is important for informing policies on insecticide selection for IRS.We reviewed literature on insecticide sensitivity among malarial mosquitoes in Zimbabwe from 1972 to 2014. International peer-reviewed articles on insecticide sensitivity in Zimbabwe, published in English in this time period, were searched using MEDLINE® (PubMed), Google Scholar, Google and grey literature. Eight publications were eligible for the present study, with one of the articles being a review paper. Six articles covered insecticide resistance, while the other two articles, published in 2000, were about the absence of resistance. Contradicting resistance results were reported in 2014.The insecticide sensitivity status and distribution of insecticide resistance in mosquitoes are still under debate in Zimbabwe, as studies report differing results. The resistance trend in Zimbabwe is characterised by fluctuations in the status of the sensitivity of existing insecticides. Inconsistencies in data collection methods may be responsible for the inconsistencies in the results. None of the studies have determined a link between climate/temperature variability and insecticide resistance as yet. The current insecticide sensitivity status of mosquitoes still needs to be verified.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26497808 PMCID: PMC4620648 DOI: 10.1186/s40249-015-0076-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Summary of malaria control programmes using IRS in Zimbabwe between 1945 and 2004
| Author | Year | Milestones in insecticide use in Zimbabwe |
|---|---|---|
| Mabaso et al., [ | 1945 | IRS introduced |
| 1949 | Programme launched | |
| 1957–62 | DDT and BHC used | |
| 1972–73 | BHC (equally effective as DDT but cheaper) | |
| 1974–87 | DDT (due to resistance to BHC) | |
| 1988–2000 | Deltamethrin and lambda-cyhalothrin (policy change) | |
| UNEP, [ | 2004 | DDT was reintroduced to complement pyrethroids |
| Unpublished sources/reports | 1949–1960 | BHC used for the countrywide malaria control programme, while dieldrin was used in sugar estates |
| 1960 | DDT was used to complement BHC on a small scale | |
| 1974–1976 | DDT became a principal insecticide for malaria control | |
| 1976–80 | No insecticide used as spraying activities were disrupted by war of liberation | |
| 1980–1987 | Extensive use of DDT resumed | |
| 1987–1991 | DDT used, interchangeable with deltamethrin | |
| 1991 | DDT abandoned (decision to abandon was motivated by need to protect tobacco export) | |
| 1991–2003 | Only pyrethroids (deltamethrin, lambda-cyhalothrin and alpha-cypermethrin) were used | |
| UNEP, [ | 2004 | DDT was reintroduced to complement pyrethroids |
Fig. 1Distribution of insecticide resistance in An. gambiae s.l. mosquitoes between 2001 and 2012 [53]
Summary of studies that assessed insecticide resistance in malarial mosquitoes between 1972 and 2014 in Zimbabwe
| Author [reference] | Objectives | Mosquito species studied | Study area | Method | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knox et al. [ | To introduce and demonstrate the usefulness of the online mapping tool IR Mapper |
| African region (results presented are for Zimbabwe) | Systematic search of published peer-reviewed literature |
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| Lukwa et al. [ | To conduct a nation-wide assessment of insecticide susceptibility in wild populations of |
| Thirteen (13) sentinel sites covering all malaria-endemic regions in Zimbabwe | All sites were sampled for resistance in malarial mosquitoes between 2011 and 2012. | No evidence of phenotypic resistance to any of the four insecticide classes in |
| PMI Africa IRS. [ | To determine insecticide susceptibility for malarial mosquito species from sentinel sites throughout Zimbabwe |
| Nine (9) sentinel sites in various provinces in Zimbabwe | WHO susceptibility tests were done using impregnated papers and test kits on wild caught |
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| Choi et al. [ | To investigate the biological attributes of insecticide resistance and parasite infection rates that both impact on malaria vector control activities |
| Honde Valley | WHO susceptibility tests were done using impregnated papers and test kits on mosquitoes were collected between February and March 2014. |
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| Munhenga et al. [ | To determine insecticide susceptibility of |
| Gokwe | WHO susceptibility tests were done using impregnated papers and test kits on wild caught | Study confirmed the presence of permethrin and DDT resistance in |
| Masendu et al. [ | To determine the distribution of malaria vectors in Zimbabwe together with the extent of insecticide resistance in different assemblages |
| Zimbabwe | National anopheline mosquito survey conducted between 1992 and 2002 at sites broadly categorised based on land use, patterns and location. | DDT resistance was detected in |
| Manokore et al. [ | To determine insecticide susceptibility of field caught |
| Gokwe district in the Midlands province | Wild caught | F1 progeny of field-caught females that were identified as |
| Green, [ | Unknown | Unknown | Chiredzi district | Unknown mosquitoes were tested against BHC | Insecticide resistance to BHC reported in Chiredzi |
Fig. 2Map of Zimbabwe indicating the geographic location of the 12 insecticide-resistant monitoring sites (the black triangles represent villages where Lukwa et al. performed susceptibility tests) [56]
Fig. 3Sites where Anopheles gambiae s.l. mosquitoes were collected for susceptibility tests, showing Gwave (in Gokwe); sites where DDT resistance was detected in 2002; and Hippo Valley, where dieldrin resistance was detected in 1972 [54]