| Literature DB >> 30590537 |
Menno R Smit1, Eric O Ochomo2, Ghaith Aljayyoussi1, Titus K Kwambai1,2,3, Bernard O Abong'o2, Teun Bousema4,5, David Waterhouse1, Nabie M Bayoh6, John E Gimnig6, Aaron M Samuels6, Meghna R Desai6, Penelope A Phillips-Howard1, Simon K Kariuki2, Duolao Wang1, Stephen A Ward1, Feiko O Ter Kuile1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ivermectin is being considered for mass drug administration for malaria, due to its ability to kill mosquitoes feeding on recently treated individuals. In a recent trial, 3-day courses of 300 and 600 mcg/kg/day were shown to kill Anopheles mosquitoes for at least 28 days post-treatment when fed patients' venous blood using membrane feeding assays. Direct skin feeding on humans may lead to higher mosquito mortality, as ivermectin capillary concentrations are higher. We compared mosquito mortality following direct skin and membrane feeding.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Anopheles gambiaezzm321990 ; direct skin feeding; ivermectin; malaria; membrane feeding
Year: 2019 PMID: 30590537 PMCID: PMC6743833 DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciy1063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Infect Dis ISSN: 1058-4838 Impact factor: 9.079
Figure 1.Trial flowchart.
Characteristics of Subjects That Participated in Both Direct-skin and Membrane Feeding
| Ivermectin 600 mcg/kg/day for 3 Days | Ivermectin 300 mcg/kg/day for 3 Days | Placebo | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | 27.3 (7.4) | 25.5 (7.5) | 26.0 (5.0) |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 13 (59%) | 16 (67%) | 14 (61%) |
| Female | 9 (41%) | 8 (33%) | 9 (39%) |
| Body mass index, kg/m2 | 22.9 (3.4) | 21.5 (3.0) | 21.6 (2.6) |
Data are shown as n (%) or mean (standard deviation). Baseline characteristics of subjects that participated in both direct skin and membrane feeding (n = 69) were similar to those of the other trial participants that did not (n = 72) [6].
Proportion of Fully Fed Mosquitoes After Direct Skin Feeding and Membrane Feeding
| Feeding Method |
| Risk Ratio (95% Confidence Interval), | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IVM-3x600 | IVM-3x300 | Placebo | IVM-3x600 vs Placebo | IVM-3x300 vs Placebo | IVM-3x600 vs IVM-3x300 | ||||
| Direct skin | 22; | 938/1096 (85.6) | 24; | 1015/1199 (84.7) | 23; | 988/1151 (85.8) | 1.00 (0.89–1.11), .95 | 0.99 (0.88–1.10), .80 | 1.01 (0.91–1.12), .84 |
| Membrane | 22; | 2584/3300 (78.3) | 24; | 2533/3613 (70.1) | 23; | 2263/3455 (65.5) | 1.20 (0.99–1.45), .07 | 1.07 (0.88–1.30), .51 | 1.12 (0.94–1.33), .20 |
Abbreviations: IVM-3x300, ivermectin 300 mcg/kg/day for 3 days; IVM-3x600, ivermectin 600 mcg/kg/day for 3 days.
aThe number of mosquitoes fully fed out of the number of mosquitoes offered a blood meal.
Figure 2.Mosquito mortality, stratified by treatment arm and feeding method. Direct skin feeding is indicated by the dashed lines; membrane feeding is indicated by the solid lines. Ivermectin 600 mcg/kg/day is indicated by the green lines; ivermectin 300 mcg/kg/day is indicated by the red lines; and placebo is indicated by the blue lines. Mortality was measured following feeding on day 7 post-treatment. The hazard ratios (95% confidence interval, P value) of mortality during the 14 days post-feeding, comparing direct skin versus membrane feeding for each treatment arm, were adjusted for mosquito clusters. Abbreviation: HR, hazard ratio.
Mosquito Mortality Following Direct Skin Feeding and Membrane Feeding
| Treatment Group | Human Subjects | Mosquito Mortality on Day 14 (%) | Risk or Hazard Ratio (95% CI), | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct Skin Feeding | Membrane Feedinga | Model | Direct Skin vs Membrane | ||
| IVM-3x600 | 22 | 890/938 (94.9) | 1677/1729 (97.0) | GEE | RR 0.98 (0.90–1.06), .55 |
| 2514/2584 (97.3) | Cox | HR 0.93 (0.86–1.00), .052 | |||
| IVM-3x300 | 24 | 938/1015 (92.4) | 1573/1703 (92.4) | GEE | RR 1.01 (0.98–1.03), .69 |
| 2330/2533 (92.0) | Cox | HR 1.01 (0.93–1.09), .80 | |||
| Placebo | 23 | 503/988 (50.9) | 706/1493 (47.3) | GEE | RR 1.07 (0.88–1.29), .51 |
| 999/2263 (44.1) | Cox | HR 1.03 (0.92–1.15), .58 |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; GEE, generalized estimating equations; HR, hazard ratio; IVM-3x300, ivermectin 300 mcg/kg/day for 3 days; IVM-3x600, ivermectin 600 mcg/kg/day for 3 days; RR, risk ratio.
aGEE models used 2 cups of mosquitoes, followed for 14 days; Cox models used the same 2 cups, plus 1 cup, followed for 10 days, which were then euthanized for oocyst polymerase chain reaction.
Figure 3.Capillary versus venous ratios of ivermectin plasma concentration during 2–7 days post-treatment. The open circles represent the capillary versus venous ratios of observed ivermectin plasma concentrations for each sample (n = 177), taken from patients in the main trial contributing capillary samples (n = 61) during 2–7 days post-treatment (maximum 4 samples/patient). The ball-whiskers indicate the median ± interquartile range per sampling day. The horizonal line indicates a median ratio of 1.33 (5th–95th percentiles, 0.98–1.63), based on the trial’s simultaneous pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic population model [10]. Adapted from Smit et al [10].
Figure 4.Direct skin feeding versus membrane feeding ratios of mosquito mortality rates by ivermectin concentration and capillary-venous ratio at the time of feeding. The circles represent the observed 14-day mosquito mortality rate ratios of direct skin versus membrane feeding, performed at day 7 post-treatment for each patient that received ivermectin and consented to direct skin feeding (n = 46), plotted against their day 7 (A) predicted ivermectin capillary plasma concentration and (B) predicted capillary versus venous ratio, using the trial’s simultaneous pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic population model [10]. (C) and (D) are as per (B), but now stratified by sex and body mass index, respectively. The lines indicate the linear fits. Abbreviation: BMI, body mass index; DF, direct skin feeding; MF, membrane feeding; mosq., mosquito; mort., mortality; pred., predicted.