| Literature DB >> 28418299 |
Gerry F Killeen, John P Masalu, Dingani Chinula, Emmanouil A Fotakis, Deogratius R Kavishe, David Malone, Fredros Okumu.
Abstract
We assessed window screens and eave baffles (WSEBs), which enable mosquitoes to enter but not exit houses, as an alternative to indoor residual spraying (IRS) for malaria vector control. WSEBs treated with water, the pyrethroid lambda-cyhalothrin, or the organophosphate pirimiphos-methyl, with and without a binding agent for increasing insecticide persistence on netting, were compared with IRS in experimental huts. Compared with IRS containing the same insecticide, WSEBs killed similar proportions of Anopheles funestus mosquitoes that were resistant to pyrethroids, carbamates and organochlorines and greater proportions of pyrethroid-resistant, early exiting An. arabiensis mosquitoes. WSEBs with pirimiphos-methyl killed greater proportions of both vectors than lambda-cyhalothrin or lambda-cyhalothrin plus pirimiphos-methyl and were equally efficacious when combined with binding agent. WSEBs required far less insecticide than IRS, and binding agents might enhance durability. WSEBs might enable affordable deployment of insecticide combinations to mitigate against physiologic insecticide resistance and improve control of behaviorally resistant, early exiting vectors.Entities:
Keywords: Anopheles arabiensis; Anopheles funestus; Anopheles spp.; Plasmodium spp.; Tanzania; behavior; eave baffles; entomology; indoor residual spraying; insecticide resistance; lambda-cyhalothrin; malaria; mosquitoes; parasites; pirimiphos-methyl; residual transmission; vector control; vector-borne infections; window screens
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28418299 PMCID: PMC5403053 DOI: 10.3201/eid2305.160662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Design (A) and mechanism of action (B) of insecticide-treated window screens and eave baffles for control of malaria vector mosquitoes, Tanzania.
Window screen and eave baffle treatments that were rotated through experimental huts with 3 IRS treatments for control of malaria vector mosquitoes, Tanzania*
| Treatment no. | Description | Eaves baffled | Windows screened | Treatment of window screen and eave baffle netting | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Entrances | Exits | LC, mg/m2 | PM, g/m2 | BA | |||
| 1 | Negative control: no trapping or insecticide | Yes | No | No | 0 | 0 | No |
| 2 | Partial negative control: trapping without insecticide | Yes | Yes | Yes | 0 | 0 | No |
| 3 | Partial negative control: trapping without insecticide | Yes | Yes | Yes | 0 | 0 | Yes |
| 4 | Trapping plus long-lasting LC and BA treatment | Yes | Yes | Yes | 55 | 0 | Yes |
| 5 | Trapping plus varying dose PM treatments | Yes | Yes | Yes | 0 | 1 | No |
| 6 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 0 | 2 | No | |
| 7 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 0 | 4 | No | |
| 8 | Trapping plus varying dose PM treatments with BA | Yes | Yes | Yes | 0 | 1 | Yes |
| 9 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 0 | 2 | Yes | |
| 10 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 0 | 4 | Yes | |
| 11 | Trapping plus varying dose PM treatments with BA and LC | Yes | Yes | Yes | 55 | 1 | Yes |
| 12 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 55 | 2 | Yes | |
| 13 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 55 | 4 | Yes | |
| *Indoor residual spraying treatments of experimental huts used lambda-cyhalothin (30 mg/m2 in 4 huts), pirimiphos-methyl (2 g/m2 in 4 huts), or a negative control (water diluent only: 5 huts), which was applied to all inner surfaces of walls and ceilings. All doses are per square meter of treated netting (window screening and eave baffles) or wall and ceiling surface (IRS), so that these doses can be directly compared in terms of lethality and cost per unit area treated. The 26-day schedule applied to complete 1 full replicate of evaluation for duplicates of these 13 treatments, by rotating them through all 13 IRS-treated experimental huts, is detailed in | |||||||
Figure 2Effect of window screens and eave baffles treated with 13 combinations of insecticides and binding agents on malaria vector mosquito mortality rates inside experimental huts, Tanzania. A) Anopheles funestus. B) An. arabiensis. Huts were previously sprayed with 1 of 3 alternative indoor residual spraying regimens (Technical Appendix 1) and occupied by 2 volunteers sleeping under pyrethroid-treated, long-lasting insecticidal nets. IRS, indoor residual spraying. Error bars indicate 95 CIs. Estimated mean mortality rates and 95% CIs, as well as statistical contrasts between the most relevant treatment pairs, are indicated in Technical Appendix 2).