| Literature DB >> 30278044 |
M Sol Gaspe1,2, Yael M Provecho1,2,3, María P Fernández1,2,4, Claudia V Vassena5,6, Pablo L Santo Orihuela5,7, Ricardo E Gürtler1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rapid reinfestation of insecticide-treated dwellings hamper the sustained elimination of Triatoma infestans, the main vector of Chagas disease in the Gran Chaco region. We conducted a seven-year longitudinal study including community-wide spraying with pyrethroid insecticides combined with periodic vector surveillance to investigate the house reinfestation process in connection with baseline pyrethroid resistance, housing quality and household mobility in a rural section of Pampa del Indio mainly inhabited by deprived indigenous people (Qom). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30278044 PMCID: PMC6168123 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0006804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Map of the study area.
a. Location of Chaco Province, northeastern Argentina, within the Gran Chaco ecoregion. b. Location of Pampa del Indio municipality within Chaco Province. c. Urban, peri-urban and rural areas (I-IV) of the municipality.
Type and coverage of house infestation surveys and spraying with pyrethroid insecticides in Area III of Pampa del Indio, 2008–2015.
Only occupied houses are included.
| Months post-spraying (Month/year) | Intended vector survey coverage | Type of spraying | Pyrethroid dose | % spray coverage (No. houses sprayed) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 (10/2008) | Total | Community-wide | Simple | 96.0 (404) |
| 10 (8/2009) | Total | Selective | Simple | 100.0 (46) |
| 18 (4/2010) | Total | Selective | Simple | 100.0 (2) |
| 38 (12/2011) | Partial | Selective | Double | 100.0 (2) |
| 49 (11/2012) | Total | Selective | Simple | 100.0 (3) |
| 59 (9/2013) | Partial | Selective | Simple | 0.0 (0) |
| 78 (4/2015) | Total | Selective | Simple | 0.0 (0) |
a Suspension concentrate beta-cypermethrin (50 mg/m2) or deltamethrin (25 mg/m2) for community-wide spraying; deltamethrin was applied during the vector surveillance phase except in 2009 (10 MPS) when beta-cypermethrin was used (the only insecticide available at the vector control program).
b Includes 26 houses sprayed by local healthcare agents in July 2008 and not re-sprayed five months later when the community-wide insecticide campaign was undertaken.
c All infested and newly-built houses (not sprayed during the insecticidal campaign) were sprayed with insecticides.
Fig 2Status of house units over time (A: total and occupied; B: new, demolished and vacant) and survival curves of baseline-infested, -non-infested and -occupied house units (C) in Area III of Pampa del Indio, 2008–2015.
Characteristics of domestic premises, household size and vector control practices in Area III of Pampa del Indio, 2008–2015.
| Attribute | % of houses (No. of houses surveyed) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 MPS | 49 MPS | 78 MPS | |
| Mud walls | 78.9 (399) | 75.1 (438) | 72.4 (445) |
| Brick-and-cement walls | 25.8 (399) | 33.3 (438) | 42.0 (445) |
| Tarred-cardboard roofs | 52.9 (399) | 38.4 (409) | 31.6 (433) |
| Rural housing program | NR | 8.3 (423) | 18.6 (427) |
| Refuge availability (mean ± SD) | 3.8 ± 0.8 | 4.1 ± 0.8 | 4.0 ± 0.7 |
| Domestic insecticide application | 47.7 (386) | 65.7 (411) | NR |
| Household size (mean ± SD) | 6.2 ± 3.5 | 5.8 ± 3.4 | 5.9 ± 3.5 |
| Residential overcrowding | NR | 3.5 ± 2.3 | 3.4 ± 2.1 |
| Household educational level | NR | 5.3 ± 3.1 | 5.1 ± 3.1 |
a Fraction of all surveyed house units built by the housing program, which included human sleeping quarters with brick-and-cement walls, corrugated metal-sheet roof and cement floor.
b Number of residents per sleeping quarter.
c Mean number of years of schooling among residents aged ˃15 years old.
*Data not registered (NR).
Distribution of household mobility and origin of new occupants in Area III of Pampa del Indio, 2008–2012 and 2012–2015.
| Variable | Level | % (no. of house units) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–49 MPS | 49–78 MPS | ||
| Household mobility | Non-movers | 78.5 (317) | 79.8 (352) |
| Movers | 11.6 (47) | 11.8 (52) | |
| Out-migrants | 9.2 (37) | 7.5 (33) | |
| Other | 0.7 (3) | 0.9 (4) | |
| Origin of occupants of new houses | Movers | 51.0 (76) | 45.3 (39) |
| New households | 2.7 (4) | 31.4 (27) | |
| In-migration | 6.0 (9) | 23.3 (20) | |
| No data | 40.3 (60) | - (0) | |
* Only includes stable and non-stable housing units.
1 Includes permanent movement to large cities or (peri-) urban areas of Pampa del Indio, and absence of an exact destination.
2 The only dweller passed away.
Fig 3Prevalence of house infestation (bars) and relative abundance (circles: median; bars: first and third quartiles) of A) Triatoma infestans and B) Triatoma sordida in domestic and peridomestic premises in Area III of Pampa del Indio, 2008–2015.
Numbers above bars indicate the number of occupied houses inspected in each survey. The y axis scale differs between graphs.
Fig 4Comparison between householders’ notifications of the presence of T. infestans or any triatomine species and the outcome of other vector detection methods (including timed-manual searches, during insecticide spraying and householders’ bug collections) in Area III of Pampa del Indio, 2008–2015.
Only notifications of Triatominae (without distinguishing species) were registered at 38 and 59 MPS.
Mortality of T. infestans populations in pyrethroid-resistance bioassays, Area III of Pampa del Indio, 2008 (baseline).
| Deltamethrin resistance status (% mortality) | No. of houses | % median mortality (first-third quartiles) |
|---|---|---|
| Susceptible (91–100%) | 10 | 100 |
| Moderate (76–90%) | 8 | 83.5 (80.8–90.0) |
| Reduced (50–75%) | 4 | 58.0 (56.0–68.8) |
Fig 5Spatial distribution of baseline (A) and post-spraying (B) house infestation with The maps were created in QGIS 2.18.16. based on the data collected within the scope of this study (S3 Table).
Post-spraying domestic infestation with Triatoma infestans according to housing stability and improvements in Area III of Pampa del Indio, 2008–2012.
The table includes only occupied houses inspected at least once over 10–49 MPS and excludes the three putative residual foci detected at 10 MPS.
| Housing stability | Housing improvement | Prevalence of domestic infestation (no. houses infested/ no. inspected) | Rate of post-spraying domestic infestation per 100 house-years (exposure time) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-stable houses | No | 1.5 (1/67) | 1.1 (90.2) |
| Stable houses | No | 1.4 (4/288) | 0.3 (1176.0) |
| Yes | 0.0 (0/29) | 0.0 (118.4) | |
| New houses | - | 0.7 (1/141) | 0.6 (159.2) |
* ‘Non-stable’ includes occupied houses at baseline that subsequent became vacant or were demolished over the follow-up; ‘Stable’ includes houses that were permanently occupied over the follow-up; ‘New houses’ include occupied houses that were built after the baseline survey.
** Housing improvement refers to a house that shifted from a mud-walled domicile (or wood or plastic) to one having brick-and-cement walls and a corrugated metal-sheet roof.
*** If the three putative residual foci detected at 10 MPS were included, the prevalence of domestic infestation reaches 2.4% (7/291) and the rate 0.6% (over 1188.3 house-years).