| Literature DB >> 26957210 |
Abstract
This article reports the changing pattern of US President's Malaria Initiative-funded IRS in sub-Saharan Africa between 2008 and 2015. IRS coverage in sub-Saharan Africa increased from <2 % of the at-risk population in 2005, to 11 % or 78 million people in 2010, mainly as a result of increased funding from PMI. The scaling up of IRS coverage in sub-Saharan Africa has been successful in several epidemiological settings and contributed to reduced malaria transmission rates. However, the spread and intensification of pyrethroid resistance in malaria vectors led many control programmes to spray alternative insecticides. Between 2009 and 2013, pyrethroid spraying decreased from 87 % (13/15) of PMI-funded countries conducting IRS to 44 % (7/16), while bendiocarb use increased from 7 % (1/15) to 56 % (9/16). Long-lasting pirimiphos-methyl CS received WHOPES recommendation in 2013 and was scheduled to be sprayed in 85 % (11/13) of PMI-funded countries conducting IRS in 2015. The gradual replacement of relatively inexpensive pyrethroids, firstly with bendiocarb (carbamate) and subsequently with pirimiphos methyl CS (organophosphate), has contributed to the downscaling of most PMI-funded IRS programmes. Overall, there was a 53 % decrease in the number of structures sprayed between years of peak coverage and 2015, down from 9.04 million to 4.26 million structures. Sizeable reductions in the number of structures sprayed were reported in Madagascar (56 %, 576,320-254,986), Senegal (64 %, 306,916-111,201), Tanzania (68 %, 1,224,095-389,714) and Zambia (63 %, 1,300,000-482,077), while in Angola, Liberia and Malawi PMI-funded spraying was suspended. The most commonly cited reason was increased cost of pesticides, as vector resistance necessitated switching from pyrethroids to organophosphates. There are worrying preliminary reports of malaria resurgence following IRS withdrawal in parts of Benin, Tanzania and Uganda. The increase in malaria cases following the end of the Global Malaria Eradication Programme in 1969 highlights the fragility of such gains when control efforts are weakened. At present there are several countries reliant on organophosphates and carbamates for IRS, and increasing incipient resistance is a serious threat that could result in IRS no longer being viable. A portfolio of new cost-effective insecticides with different modes of action is urgently needed.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26957210 PMCID: PMC4784374 DOI: 10.1186/s12936-016-1201-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Attributes of insecticide formulations commonly used for IRS for malaria control and prevention
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aFrequency of vector resistance recorded in sub-Saharan Africa [56]
bRelated to the volume of formulation required, packaging, ease of shipping and disposal or recycling requirements
Fig. 1PMI-funded insecticide use for IRS between 2008 and 2015 (based on [14, 28] and 2015 PMI malaria operational plans)
Decrease in number of house structures sprayed with insecticide for malaria prevention between year of peak coverage and 2015 (data taken from PMI national malaria operational plans 2010–2016) [21, 22, 28, 37–45, 74–80]
| Country | Year of peak coverage | Structures sprayed in year of peak coverage | Structures sprayed in 2015 | % Reduction in structures sprayed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angola | 2011 | 145,264 | 0 | 100 |
| Benin | 2014 | 254,072 | 252,706 | 1 |
| Ethiopia | 2011 | 858,657 | 670,303 | 22 |
| Ghana | 2012 | 371,362 | 231,345 | 38 |
| Kenya | 2008 | 764,050 | 0 | 100 |
| Liberia | 2012 | 96,901 | 0 | 100 |
| Madagascar | 2010 | 576,320 | 254,986 | 56 |
| Malawi | 2010 | 97,329 | 0 | 100 |
| Mali | 2013 | 228,985 | 131,894 | 42 |
| Mozambique | 2011 | 660,064 | 440,579 | 33 |
| Nigeria | 2013 | 62,592 | 0 | 100 |
| Rwanda | 2011 | 358,804 | 213,271 | 41 |
| Senegal | 2012 | 306,916 | 111,201 | 64 |
| Tanzania | 2012 | 1,224,095 | 389,714 | 68 |
| Uganda | 2011 | 908,627 | 850,000 | 6 |
| Zambia | 2010 | 1,300,000 | 482,077 | 63 |
| Zanzibar | 2008 | 200,731 | 66,497 | 67 |
| Zimbabwe | 2013 | 622,300 | 163,922 | 74 |
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Fig. 2Insecticide classes considered as a viable option for IRS in 2015 (i.e., susceptible malaria vectors present in areas undergoing IRS). An insecticide was considered as not a viable option for IRS if it had previously been replaced due to vector resistance, was not registered for use, or susceptibility tests demonstrated widespread resistance (based on PMI operational plans FY2015 and [57])