| Literature DB >> 26893012 |
Busiku Hamainza1,2, Chadwick H Sikaala3,4, Hawela B Moonga5, Javan Chanda6, Dingani Chinula7, Mulenga Mwenda8, Mulakwa Kamuliwo9, Adam Bennett10, Aklilu Seyoum11, Gerry F Killeen12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Long-lasting, insecticidal nets (LLINs) and indoor residual spraying (IRS) are the most widely accepted and applied malaria vector control methods. However, evidence that incremental impact is achieved when they are combined remains limited and inconsistent.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26893012 PMCID: PMC4758014 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1143-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Fig. 1Map indicating location of health facilities and associated catchment populations enrolled in the study, with allocation of IRS treatments per cluster and year [a LLINs + IRS (deltamethrin WG); b LLINs + IRS (EC pirimiphos methyl or lambdacyhalothrin CS); c LLINs + IRS (EC pirimiphos methyl or CS pirimiphos methyl or lambdacyhalothrin CS); and d LLINs + IRS (EC pirimiphos methyl or lambdacyhalothrin CS)]
Trends in RDT-determined diagnostic positivity (DP) at each cluster over time as different IRS treatments were applied
| Cluster | October 2010–March 2011 | October 2011–March 2012 | October 2012–March 2013 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRS treatment | DP % (n/N) | IRS treatment | DP % (n/N) | IRS treatment | DP % (n/N) | |
| 1 | None | 24.7 (372/1508) | None | 9.5 (95/998) | None | 14.4 (150/1039) |
| 2 | None | 20.9 (559/2676) | Pirimiphosmethyl EC | 8.5 (280/3292) | None | 11.9 (126/1061) |
| 3 | None | 26.9 (809/3006) | None | 10.8 (436/4033) | None | 14.1 (282/2004) |
| 4 | Deltamethrin WG | 33.2 (825/2489) | Pirimiphosmethyl EC | 5.9 (217/3708) | Pirimiphosmethyl EC | 10.8 (314/2908) |
| 5 | Deltamethrin WG | 27.5 (396/1439) | Pirimiphosmethyl EC | 18.2 (624/3436) | Pirimiphosmethyl EC | 27.3 (456/1673) |
| 6 | Deltamethrin WG | 11.9 (338/2845) | Lambdacyhalothrin CS | 5.2 (76/1457) | Lambdacyhalothrin CS | 3.8 (57/1505) |
| 7 | Deltamethrin WG | 6.0 (144/2415) | Lambdacyhalothrin CS | 4.2 (130/3111) | Lambdacyhalothrin CS | 2.99 (33/1105) |
| 8 | None | 55.7 (202/363) | None | 29.9 (974/3261) | Pirimiphosmethyl CS | 9.0 (209/2321) |
| 9 | None | 36.4 (4/11) | Pirimiphosmethyl EC | 46.6 (684/1467) | Pirimiphosmethyl CS | 23.5 (366/1561) |
| 10 | None | 50.7 (172/339) | None | 35.4 (444/1254) | Pirimiphosmethyl CS | 27.1 (363/1341) |
| 11 | None | 51.3 (60/117) | Pirimiphosmethyl EC | 30.2 (941/3112) | None | 11.9 (300/2531) |
| 12 | None | 61.9 (26/42) | None | 33.9 (514/1517) | Pirimiphosmethyl CS | 21.7 (246/1132) |
| 13 | None | 60.0 (120/200) | Pirimiphosmethyl EC | 27 (5.033/1974) | None | 30.6 (666/2180) |
| 14 | None | 52.4 (33/63) | None | 41.3 (786/1904) | Pirimiphosmethyl CS | 16.99 (221/1301) |
Association of malaria infection status with age, sex, LLINs, IRS, number of tests conducted per participant, geographical location, season and IRS insecticide used
| Category | DP % | N/N (I) | OR [95 % CI] | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 21.7 | 31,974/147,257 (25,354) | 0.13 [0.08, 0.21] | <0.001 |
| Age | ||||
| <1 | 14.2 | 501/3535 (1735) | 1.26 [1.09, 1.45] | 0.001 |
| 1–4 | 24.0 | 6127/25,505 (5677) | 2.75 [2.54, 2.98] | <0.001 |
| 5–10 | 27.4 | 10,066/36,779 (7608) | 3.62 [3.35, 3.91] | <0.001 |
| 11–14 | 26.0 | 4892/18,840 (4746) | 3.36 [3.09, 3.65] | <0.001 |
| 15–24 | 20.3 | 4491/22,077 (5685) | 2.04 [1.88, 2.22] | <0.001 |
| 25–44 | 14.9 | 4028/27,044 (5807) | 1.24 [1.14, 1.34] | <0.001 |
| ≥45 | 13.8 | 1796/13,027 (2903) | 1 [NA] | NA |
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 23.3 | 16,068/79,208 (12,008) | 1 [NA] | NA |
| Female | 20.3 | 15,750/67,567 (13,228) | 0.86 [0.83, 0.90] | <0.001 |
| Interventions | ||||
| LLINs | 20.0 | 20,613/103,149 (20,706) | 0.89 [0.85, 0.93] | <0.001 |
| IRS | 17.4 | 7568/43,560 (9926) | 0.87 [0.82, 0.93] | <0.001 |
| Number of tests conducted per participant | 21.7 | 31,974/147,257(25,354) | 0.97 [0.97, 0.98] | <0.001 |
| Type of visit | ||||
| Passive | 43.4 | 6416/14,785 (8922) | 1 [NA] | NA |
| Active | 19.2 | 25,281/131,359 (22055) | 0.29 [0.28, 0.31] | <0.001 |
| Clusters | ||||
|
| ||||
| Sinyawagora RHC | 19.7 | 1314/6655 (1959) | 2.86 [1.65, 4.97] | <0.001 |
| Kasinsa RHC | 16.7 | 2232/13,402 (3429) | 4.67 [2.78, 7.84] | <0.001 |
| Chitope RHC | 19.6 | 3419/17,463 (1215) | 2.92 [2.04, 4.17] | <0.001 |
| Luangwa High School RHC | 16.5 | 2854/17,320 (1158) | 7.37 [4.31, 12.61] | <0.001 |
| Mphuka RHC | 24.9 | 2981/11,957 (2147) | 7.37 [4.31, 12.61] | <0.001 |
| Mandombe RHC | 10.3 | 1386/13,508 (1805) | 1.54 [0.89, 2.66] | 0.119 |
| Luangwa Boma RHC | 6.4 | 839/13,161 (2033) | 1 [NA] | NA |
|
| ||||
| Kacholola RHC | 26.7 | 3108/11,654 (1166) | 7.50 [4.75, 11.84] | <0.001 |
| Hofmeyer RHC | 41.9 | 2601/6214 (2120) | 15.81 [10.20, 24.52] | <0.001 |
| Mtilizi RHC | 37.6 | 2238/5949 (2024) | 12.35 [7.72, 19.76] | <0.001 |
| Mtilizi RHP | 25.3 | 2478/9788 (3379) | 13.49 [8.45, 21.56] | <0.001 |
| Chinambi RHC | 31.9 | 1740/5463 (1741) | 9.16 [5.79, 14.48] | <0.001 |
| Mkopeka RHC | 32.8 | 2761/8413 (1311) | 14.22 [8.55, 23.63] | <0.001 |
| Chipembe RHC | 32.1 | 2023/6310 (1916) | 13.54 [8.03, 22.84] | <0.001 |
| Season | ||||
| Hot & wet (Dec–April) | 25.3 | 18,283/72,217 (20,243) | 4.20 [3.67, 4.81] | <0.001 |
| Cool & dry (May–Aug) | 23.9 | 11,216/46,860 (16,513) | 3.25 [2.80, 3.76] | <0.001 |
| Hot & dry (Sept–Nov) | 8.7 | 2444/27,983 (12,590) | 1 [NA] | NA |
| Insecticide applied for IRS | ||||
|
| ||||
| 1–3 months since last spray | 13.3 | 322/2419 (2166) | 0.81 [0.65, 1.01] | 0.064 |
| 4–6 months since last spray | 23.8 | 2411/10,150 (4231) | 1.07 [0.94, 1.23] | 0.295 |
| 7–12 months since last spray | 13.6 | 2128/15,640 (4434) | 1.16 [1.03, 1.30] | 0.013 |
| Never sprayed and >13 months since last spray | 22.8 | 27,083/118,899 (23,233) | 1 [NA] | NA |
|
| ||||
| 1–3 months since last spray | 4.7 | 145/3102 (1526) | 0.69 [0.53, 0.90] | 0.006 |
| 4–6 months since last spray | 9.4 | 207/2199 (1264) | 1.26 [1.01, 1.57] | 0.042 |
| 7–12 months since last spray | 4.5 | 157/3508 (1469) | 0.94 [0.74, 1.21] | 0.653 |
| Never sprayed and >13 months since last spray | 22.7 | 31,435/138,299 (24,931) | 1 [NA] | NA |
|
| ||||
| 1–3 months since last spray | 18.9 | 1922/10,194 (5527) | 0.77 [0.69, 0.85] | <0.001 |
| 4–6 months since last spray | 28.8 | 2666/9259 (5926) | 0.64 [0.58, 0.71] | <0.001 |
| 7–12 months since last spray | 16.0 | 1793/11,184 (5760) | 0.63 [0.56, 0.71] | <0.001 |
| Never sprayed and >13 months since last spray | 21.9 | 25,563/11,6471 (22,311) | 1 [NA] | NA |
|
| ||||
| 1–3 months since last spray | 13.0 | 468/3590 (2675) | 0.37 [0.31, 0.43] | <0.001 |
| 4–6 months since last spray | 30.6 | 1386/4536 (3349) | 0.24 [0.21, 0.27] | <0.001 |
| 7–12 months since last spray | 49.5 | 95/192 (191) | 1.35 [0.85, 2.15] | 0.204 |
| Never sprayed and >13 months since last spray | 21.6 | 29,995/138,790 (24,588) | 1 [NA] | NA |
The association of malaria infection with age, sex, use of LLINs, use of IRS, geographical location (cluster), number of tests conducted per participant, season and insecticide used in IRS was determined using GLMM; with observed malaria RDT determined status as a binary dependent outcome with the independent categories of age, sex, access and use of LLINs or IRS, insecticide used in IRS, number of tested conducted per participant and seasons. The models included date and participant nested within CHW catchment nested within geographical location (cluster) as random effects except for one in which cluster was treated as a categorical variable to determine the effects of each cluster. The final model consisted of age, sex, access and use of LLINs or IRS, insecticide used in IRS, season, number of tests conducted per participant and geographical location as the determinants of malaria infection
DP RDT-determined diagnostic positivity, n Number RDT positive, N Total number tested by RDT, I Number of individuals that participated in RDT testing, OR Odds ratio, CI Confidence intervals, P Probability of the null hypothesis, NA Not applicable because reference group
Fig. 2Study profile indicating treatments provided to each cluster with associated timelines, population surveyed and persons nights of mosquito trapping
Fig. 3The incremental protective efficacy of each of the four IRS treatments on diagnostic positivity for Plasmodium falciparum malaria infection over several time periods since the last spray round began, relative to clusters that has either never been sprayed or had last been sprayed >12 months ago (reference group), estimated exactly as described in Table 1 (a deltamethrin, b lambdacyhalothrin, c EC pirimiphos methyl and d CS pirimiphos methyl)
Fig. 4The incremental protective efficacy of pirimiphos methyl EC and CS IRS treatments on diagnostic positivity for Plasmodium falciparum malaria infection over several time periods since the last spray round began, relative to clusters that have been sprayed with either deltamethrin and/or lambdacyhalothrin (reference group), estimated exactly as described in Table 2, except that three separate models were fitted for the three different time periods since the last spray round began, and the combined pyrethroid formulations were treated as the reference group
Fig. 5The incremental protective efficacy of pirimiphos methyl EC IRS treatment on diagnostic positivity for Plasmodium falciparum malaria infection over several time periods since the last spray round began, relative to clusters that have been sprayed with pirimiphos methyl EC (reference group), estimated exactly as described in Table 2, except that three separate models were fitted for the three different time periods since the last spray round began and the EC formulation of pirimiphos methyl was treated as the reference group
Association of Anopheles funestus densities with different IRS insecticides supplementing LLINs upon months before, during and when not spraying
| Indoor residual spraying insecticide treatment regimen | Absolute numbers caught | Mean catchesa | Relative biting rates of | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [95 % Confidence interval (CI)] | (RR)a [95 % CI] | P value | ||
| Deltamethrin WG) | ||||
| 1–3 months since last spray | 73 | 0.112 [0.641, 0.371] | 0.99 [0.63, 1.56] | 0.897 |
| 4–6 months since last spray | 1229 | 0.641 [0.371, 1.109] | 3.98 [3.15, 5.04] | <0.001 |
| 7–12 months since last spray | 134 | 0.111 [0.062, 0.199] | 0.86 [0.64, 1.17] | 0.067 |
| >12 months since last spray or never | 1186 | 0.189 [0.113, 0.317] | 1 [NA]b | NAb |
| Lambdacyhalothrin CS | ||||
| 1–3 months since last spray | 20 | 0.191 [0.090, 0.405] | 1.03 [0.56, 1.88] | 0.805 |
| 4–6 months since last spray | 6 | 0.055 [0.022, 0.141] | 0.17 [0.08, 0.39] | <0.001 |
| 7–12 months since last spray | 0 | NEc | NEc | 0.972 |
| >12 months since last spray or never | 182 | 0.198 [0.121] | 1 [NA]b | NAb |
| Pirimiphosmethyl EC | ||||
| 1–3 months since last spray | 478 | 0.234 [0.131, 0.417] | 1.04 [0.83, 1.30] | 0.786 |
| 4–6 months since last spray | 346 | 0.055 [0.030, 0.098] | 0.25 [0.20, 0.33] | <0.001 |
| 7–12 months since last spray | 160 | 0.159 [0.086, 0.293] | 0.69 [0.50, 0.95] | 0.151 |
| >12 months since last spray or never | 2823 | 0.234 [0.131, 0.417] | 1 [NA]b | NAb |
| Pirimiphosmethyl CS | ||||
| 1–3 months since last spray | 14 | 0.021 [0.009, 0.047] | 0.07 [0.04, 0.13] | <0.001 |
| 4–6 months since last spray | 70 | 0.004 [0.002, 0.008] | 0.02 [0.01, 0.02] | <0.001 |
| 7–12 months since last spray | NEc | NEc | NEc | NEc |
| >12 months since last spray or never | 2087 | 0.253 [0.152, 0.422] | 1 [NA]b | NA |
NA Not applicable because reference group, NE Not estimable because no spraying of this insecticide regimen was conducted early enough to yield impact data beyond 6 months post-spray but before the following spray round so no data are available for estimation
aThe effect of different IRS treatment regimens on the mean catches of An. funestus species where estimated by fitting generalized linear mixed models (GLMMs) with An. funestus catches treated as dependent variables. The households where nested within villages which were also nested within the clusters, these together with date were treated as random effects, while the different IRS treatment regimens were categorized as independent variables. A Poisson distribution with no intercept was used to estimate the mean catches while an intercept was included in estimating the RR
Fig. 6The incremental protective efficacy of each of the four IRS treatments against Anopheles funestus bites over several time periods since the last spray round began, relative to clusters that has either never been sprayed or had last been sprayed >12 months ago (reference group), estimated exactly as described in Table 3 (ND Not done)
Fig. 7Insecticide resistance profile of Anopheles funestus in the study site from 2010 to 2013
Fig. 8Mean exposure of humans to Anopheles funestus bites when they are indoors or outdoors where πi is the average proportion of human exposure to bites of the Anopheles funestus which occurs indoors in the absence of any protective measure, πs is the average proportion of human exposure to bites of the Anopheles funestus population which occurs indoors when individuals are asleep in the absence of any protective measure, and πi,n is the average proportion of residual human exposure for users of net which occurs indoors, calculated exactly as previously described [39]