| Literature DB >> 31938550 |
Lin H Chen1,2, Mary E Wilson3,4.
Abstract
Yellow fever (YF) outbreaks continue, have expanded into new areas and threaten large populations in South America and Africa. Predicting where epidemics might occur must take into account local mosquito populations and specific YF virus strain, as well as ecoclimatic conditions, sociopolitical and demographic factors including population size, density, and mobility, and vaccine coverage. Populations of Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus from different regions vary in susceptibility to and capacity to transmit YF virus. YF virus cannot be eliminated today because the virus circulates in animal reservoirs, but human disease could be eliminated with wide use of the vaccine. WHO EYE (Eliminate Yellow Fever Epidemics) is a welcome plan to control YF, with strategies to be carried out from 2017 to 2026: to expand use of YF vaccine, to prevent international spread, and to contain outbreaks rapidly. YF vaccination is the mainstay in controlling YF outbreaks, but global supply is insufficient. Therefore, dose-sparing strategies have been proposed including fractional dosing and intradermal administration. Fractional dosing has been effectively used in outbreak control but currently does not satisfy International Health Regulations; special documentation is needed for international travel. Vector control is another facet in preventing YF outbreaks, and novel methods are being considered and proposed.Entities:
Keywords: 3–10: yellow fever; Control; Dose-sparing; Epidemiology; Flavivirus; Fractional dosing; Outbreak; Vaccination; Vaccine supply; Vector
Year: 2020 PMID: 31938550 PMCID: PMC6954598 DOI: 10.1186/s40794-020-0101-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines ISSN: 2055-0936
Strategies being proposed and explored for vector control [85]
| Strategies | Description of methods |
|---|---|
| Dissemination of larvicidal agents through contaminated adult mosquitoes | Entomopathogenic |
| Inhibit mosquito host seeking | Spatial repellents such as transfluthrin and metofluthrin disperse effectively |
| Traps to reduce vectors | Use traps to remove gravid females |
| “Attractive toxic sugar baits” | Solutions containing sugar, an attractant, and toxin used indoors and outdoors to kill mosquitoes |
| Insecticide-treated materials | New technology microencapsulation binds deeper in the fabric and promises increased stability and longer release of the insecticide |
| “Sterile insect technology” | Release sterilized males with improved sterilization method to reduce offspring population |
| Release of insects with dominant lethality | Release mosquitoes that carry a transgenic construct that restricts survival, hence reduces that mosquito species |
| Natural intracellular bacterial symbiont | Male mosquitoes infected by |
| “Gene drives” | A transgenic element inserted into the sequence that leads to mosquito population replacement and population suppression (e.g. by creating a sterile allele) |