| Literature DB >> 31945061 |
Anne L Wilson1, Orin Courtenay2, Louise A Kelly-Hope3, Thomas W Scott4, Willem Takken5, Steve J Torr1, Steve W Lindsay6.
Abstract
Vector-borne diseases (VBDs) such as malaria, dengue, and leishmaniasis exert a huge burden of morbidity and mortality worldwide, particularly affecting the poorest of the poor. The principal method by which these diseases are controlled is through vector control, which has a long and distinguished history. Vector control, to a greater extent than drugs or vaccines, has been responsible for shrinking the map of many VBDs. Here, we describe the history of vector control programmes worldwide from the late 1800s to date. Pre 1940, vector control relied on a thorough understanding of vector ecology and epidemiology, and implementation of environmental management tailored to the ecology and behaviour of local vector species. This complex understanding was replaced by a simplified dependency on a handful of insecticide-based tools, particularly for malaria control, without an adequate understanding of entomology and epidemiology and without proper monitoring and evaluation. With the rising threat from insecticide-resistant vectors, global environmental change, and the need to incorporate more vector control interventions to eliminate these diseases, we advocate for continued investment in evidence-based vector control. There is a need to return to vector control approaches based on a thorough knowledge of the determinants of pathogen transmission, which utilise a range of insecticide and non-insecticide-based approaches in a locally tailored manner for more effective and sustainable vector control.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31945061 PMCID: PMC6964823 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0007831
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Global burden of VBDs.
| Data source | Estimated cases worldwide in 2017 (thousands [95% CI]) | Estimated global all-age DALYs in 2017 (thousands [95% CI]) | Estimated all-age deaths worldwide in 2017 (thousands [95% CI]) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| World Malaria Report 2018 [ | 219,000 (203,000–262,000) | Not stated | 435 | |
| Global Burden of Disease 2017 [ | 208,768 (170,214–257,506) | 45,000 (31,700–61,000) | 619.8 (440.1–839.5) | |
| Global Burden of Disease 2017 [ | 104,771 (63 759–158,870) | 2,920 (1,630–3,970) | 40.5 (17.6–49.8) | |
| 4,166.6 (3,560.7–4,992.8) | 264 (172–389) | - | ||
| 10.6 (8.2–16.5) | 511 (1.02–2,440) | 7.5 (0.0–34.5) | ||
| 97.4 (28.0–251.7) | 314 (67.2–900) | 4.8 (1.0–13.8) | ||
| 6,197.0 (5,248.5–7,243.9) | 232 (210–261) | 7.9 (7.5–8.6) | ||
| 4.9 (1.3–19.8) | 79.0 (15.4–287) | 1.4 (0.3–4.9) | ||
| 64,623.4 (59,178.2–70,866.1) | 1,360 (752–2,160) | - | ||
| 20,938.1 (12,882.3–37,227.7) | 1,340 (639–2,370) | - | ||
| 3,818.9 (2,842.6–5,135.2) | 303 (202–425) | - | ||
| 2,232.2 (1,659.6–3,097.6) | 2.24 (1.27–4.66) | 0.0 (0.0–0.1) |
*Prevalence.
Abbreviations: CL, cutaneous leishmaniasis; DALY, disability-adjusted life year; HAT, human African trypanosomiasis; LF, lymphatic filariasis; VBD, vector-borne disease; VL, visceral leishmaniasis
Categories and examples of vector control methods [11].
| Immature | Chemical larvicides | Contact pesticides affecting insect nervous system (e.g., temephos) or endocrine system (insect growth regulators, e.g., pyriproxyfen) | |
| Adult | ITNs | Pyrethroid-treated ITNs or combination ITNs (e.g., pyrethroid plus synergist piperonyl butoxide) for malaria, LF, and leishmaniasis control | |
| Insecticide-treated materials for personal protection | Insecticide-treated clothing for workers and mobile populations | ||
| IRS | Spraying of residual insecticides (typically either pyrethroids, carbamates, or organophosphates) indoors for malaria and | ||
| Space spraying | Aircraft, vehicle or hand-held space spraying for dengue epidemic and other | ||
| Insecticidal treatment of habitat | Focal, perifocal, ground, or aerial insecticide spraying | ||
| Insecticide-treated cattle | Pour-on or spot-on pyrethroids for control of tsetse | ||
| Insecticide-treated traps and targets | Targets for control of HAT and insecticide-treated adulticidal oviposition traps for | ||
| Topical repellent | Chemicals (e.g., N,N-diethyl-meta-toluamide [DEET], picaridin) applied to the skin to reduce vector biting | ||
| Spatial repellent | Transfluthrin/metafluthrin passive emanators or coils | ||
| Immature | Microbial larvicides | ||
| Predator species | Predatory fish or invertebrates | ||
| Habitat modification, i.e., a permanent change of land and/or water | Drainage of surface water, land reclamation and filling, and coverage of large water storage containers (or complete coverage of water surfaces) with a material that is impenetrable to mosquitoes, such as expanded polystyrene beads | ||
| Habitat manipulation, i.e., a recurrent activity | Water-level manipulation, exposing habitats to the sun (depending on the ecology of the vector), flushing of streams, drain clearance, and source reduction, including rubbish disposal and regular emptying and cleaning of domestic containers (e.g., flowerpots, animal drinking water troughs) | ||
| Regulatory measures | Removal of man-made aquatic habitats and appropriate waste disposal | ||
| Adult | House improvement and screening | Closing eaves, door and window screening | |
| Removal trapping | Solar-powered mosquito trapping system for malaria control and sticky adulticidal oviposition traps for |
Abbreviations: HAT, human African trypanosomiasis; IRS, indoor residual spraying; ITN, insecticide-treated bed net; LF, lymphatic filariasis
Fig 1A short history of vector control.
CL, cutaneous leishmaniasis; DDT, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane; GMEP, Global Malaria Eradication Programme; HAT, human African trypanosomiasis; IRS, indoor residual spraying; ITN, insecticide-treated bed net; VBD, vector-borne disease; VL, visceral leishmaniasis.
Historical overview of notable vector control programmes and their effects.
| Date | Location | Programme | Disease | Vector species targeted | Vector control methods implemented | Effects observed | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Late 1800s | East Africa | Efforts led by colonial powers | HAT | Bush clearance, game destruction, trapping of tsetse | Decline in tsetse populations | [ | |
| 1901–1920 | Malaya (now Malaysia) | Efforts led by Sir Malcolm Watson | Malaria | Draining marshes, subsoil drainage, filling water bodies, tree clearing, relocating housing | Reduction in malaria | [ | |
| 1901–1912 | Cuba | Efforts led by Gorgas and Le Prince, taken over by local authorities after 1904 | Yellow fever and malaria | Yellow fever: house inspection and destruction/oiling of containers, fines if cisterns not covered, and isolation of patients with screening and netting, and fumigation of their premises | Reduction in yellow fever and malaria | [ | |
| 1904–1913 | Panama Canal | Efforts led by Gorgas and Le Prince | Yellow fever and malaria | Yellow fever: house screening, premise and container inspections, destruction or treatment of containers with oil/larvicide | Reduction in malaria and yellow fever | [ | |
| 1920–1935 | Indonesia | ‘Species sanitation’ led by N. H. Swellengrebel | Malaria | Environmental management, e.g., filling and draining of ponds, maintaining and flushing drains, planting trees | Reduction in malaria | [ | |
| 1930–1962 | Italy | Italian antimalarial campaign ‘bonfica integrale’ under Mussolini | Malaria | Draining of Pontine marshes, house screening, community education and mobilisation, larviciding using Paris Green, clearing canals and ditches, DDT aerial spraying (after 1946) | Malaria eradication | [ | |
| 1930–1942 | Brazil | Cooperative Yellow Fever Service directed by Fred Soper | Yellow fever and malaria | Yellow fever: container inspections, oiling/larviciding of aquatic habitats, sanitary legislation enforced by monetary fines | Elimination of | [ | |
| 1929–1950 | Copperbelt, Zambia | Roan Antelope Copper Mine and others, including Nchanga Consolidated Copper Mines, Rhokana Corporation, and Mufulira Cooper Mines | Malaria | Vegetation clearance along river and tributaries, modification of river boundaries and removal of man-made obstructions, draining flooded areas and swamps, oiling of larval habitats, and house screening | At Roan Antelope Mine, reduced malaria-related mortality and morbidity by 70%–95% within 3–5 years | [ | |
| 1933–1950 | Tennessee Valley, US | TVA | Malaria | Regulation of water levels in the lakes, shoreline improvements such as deepening or diking and draining, larviciding, and later (to a limited extent) house improvement, DDT aerial spraying, and IRS using DDT | Virtual malaria elimination | [ | |
| 1942–1943 (World War II) | Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands | US Navy, Malaria Control Unit ‘Cactus’ | Malaria | Oiling of swamps, fumigation of planes and huts, relocation of plantation workers, ITNs, topical repellents, atabrine prophylaxis | Reduction in malaria cases | [ | |
| 1942–1945 | Upper Egypt | Species ( | Malaria | Larviciding with Paris Green (later Malariol due to supply issues); pyrethrum house spraying; residual spraying of boats, planes, trains, automobiles with pyrethrum (later DDT) | Massive reductions in malaria cases (10,193 cases in 1942, to 59 in 1946); eradication of | [ | |
| 1947–1951 | Southeast USA | US National Malaria Elimination Programme | Malaria | IRS with DDT, larviciding using Paris Green, deepening or diking and draining of water bodies, lining canals with concrete | Free of malaria as a significant public health problem in 1949 | [ | |
| 1955–1969 | Worldwide | Global Malaria Elimination Programme | Malaria | Varied depending on location | IRS with DDT and other residual insecticides | Elimination from some regions, but unsuccessful elsewhere | [ |
| 1947–1962 | South and Central America and Caribbean | Pan-American Sanitary Bureau | Yellow fever | Container inspections, oiling of aquatic habitats, later perifocal spraying of DDT in water containers and nearby walls | Vector eradicated from large parts of South America | [ | |
| 1951–1980 | China | National visceral leishmaniasis control programme | VL | IRS of houses and animal shelters using DDT, and elimination or topical deltamethrin treatment of dogs | Massive reduction in case incidence from 94/100,000 in 1950 to approximately 0.03/100,000 by 1980 | [ | |
| 1950s–1970s | Peruvian Andes | Gains as a result of Global Malaria Elimination Programme | CL | IRS with DDT | Decrease in cases but resurgence once IRS was stopped | [ | |
| 1973–1991 | Botswana | Tsetse control programme | HAT | Aerial spraying of insecticides; deltamethrin-treated targets to stop reinvasion of tsetse | Eliminated tsetse and HAT | [ | |
| 1970s–present | Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea | Malaria Elimination Programme | LF | Solomon Islands: IRS using DDT | Elimination from Solomon Islands by late 1970s, and near elimination from PNG (ongoing) | [ | |
| 1974–2002 | West Africa | Onchocerciasis Control Programme (OCP) and to a lesser extent African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) | Onchocerciasis | Larviciding | Near elimination of river blindness from West Africa | [ | |
| 1991–present | Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay | Southern Cone Initiative (SCI) | Chagas disease | IRS, house improvements, and community education | Decline in indoor infestation and disease incidence | [ | |
| 1953–present | India, Nepal, Bangladesh | Visceral Leishmaniasis Elimination Programme–Memorandum of Understanding between countries signed 2005 (previous gains as a result of Malaria Eradication Programme) | VL | IRS using DDT in homes and animal shelters | Decline in cases in 3 countries from 77,000 in 1992 to 6,000 in 2016 | [ | |
| 1915 (California)–present | US | Mosquito abatement districts | Predominantly larval control | Prevention of local | [ | ||
| 2000–present | SSA | Campaign to eliminate HAT (numerous donors, research institutions, and implementing partners) | HAT | Screening and treatment, traps and targets (‘Tiny Targets’), insecticide-treated cattle | 25,841 cases of | [ | |
| 2000–present | SSA | Scale-up of ITNs and IRS | Malaria | ITNs and IRS | ITNs responsible for 68% of 663 million clinical cases averted from 2000 to 2015 | [ |
Abbreviations: CL, cutaneous leishmaniasis; DDT, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane; HAT, human African trypanosomiasis; IRS, indoor residual spraying; ITN, insecticide-treated bed net; LF, lymphatic filariasis; SSA, sub-Saharan Africa; TVA, Tennessee Valley Authority; VL, visceral leishmaniasis