| Literature DB >> 35447066 |
Felicia Keesing, Stacy Mowry, William Bremer, Shannon Duerr, Andrew S Evans, Ilya R Fischhoff, Alison F Hinckley, Sarah A Hook, Fiona Keating, Jennifer Pendleton, Ashley Pfister, Marissa Teator, Richard S Ostfeld.
Abstract
Tickborne diseases (TBDs) such as Lyme disease result in ≈500,000 diagnoses annually in the United States. Various methods can reduce the abundance of ticks at small spatial scales, but whether these methods lower incidence of TBDs is poorly understood. We conducted a randomized, replicated, fully crossed, placebo-controlled, masked experiment to test whether 2 environmentally safe interventions, the Tick Control System (TCS) and Met52 fungal spray, used separately or together, affected risk for and incidence of TBDs in humans and pets in 24 residential neighborhoods. All participating properties in a neighborhood received the same treatment. TCS was associated with fewer questing ticks and fewer ticks feeding on rodents. The interventions did not result in a significant difference in incidence of human TBDs but did significantly reduce incidence in pets. Our study is consistent with previous evidence suggesting that reducing tick abundance in residential areas might not reduce incidence of TBDs in humans.Entities:
Keywords: Ixodes scapularis; Lyme disease; New York; United States; bacteria; prevention; tickborne disease; ticks; vector-borne infections; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35447066 PMCID: PMC9045441 DOI: 10.3201/eid2805.211146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 16.126
Characteristics of participants for the 24 residential neighborhoods together and for the 6 neighborhoods in each of the 4 treatment groups of tick-control interventions, New York, USA*
| Characteristic | Overall | Neither active | Active Met52 | Active bait boxes | Both active |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. neighborhoods | 24 | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 |
| Mean no. human participants per neighborhood | 97 ( | 110 ( | 94 ( | 94 ( | 90 ( |
| Mean no. outdoor pets per neighborhood | 30 ( | 26 ( | 33 ( | 29 ( | 31 ( |
| Average median age of human participants, y | 49 ( | 48 ( | 51 ( | 48 ( | 49 ( |
| Per capita no. preventive behaviors | 1.27 ( | 1.20 ( | 1.37 ( | 1.27 ( | 1.27 ( |
| Self-reported cases of diagnosed TBDs per capita before study onset, 2011–2016 | 0.07 ( | 0.05 ( | 0.07 ( | 0.07 ( | 0.07 ( |
*Data on age, previous cases of TBDs, and preventive behaviors were self-reported on the introductory survey administered during 2016–2017. Data on the number of participants and pets who spent time outside were averaged over the length of the study. Values in parentheses represent the standard error of the mean. TBDs, tickborne diseases.
Figure 1Characteristics of participants in study of tick-control interventions in residential neighborhoods, New York, USA. A) Mean percentage of participants in each age category at the time of enrollment, averaged for 24 neighborhoods. Error bars represent SEM. B) Mean percentage of households in each category of annual household income, averaged for the 6 neighborhoods in each treatment group. TCS, Tick Control System.
Figure 2Detection of questing nymphal ticks during study of tick-control interventions in residential neighborhoods, New York, USA. A) Mean number of questing nymphal ticks per flagging interval (Appendix). B) Mean percentage of properties with questing nymphal ticks detected for each treatment group and in each habitat type (forest, lawn, shrub or garden). Totals are averaged over 3 years for each neighborhood. Data include ticks from the nymphal sampling period in May–July. Error bars represent SEM. TCS, Tick Control System.
Figure 3Weighted mean number of ticks on white-footed mice (A) and chipmunks (B) as a function of tick-control treatment, New York, USA, 2017–2019. Means represent the average of the 6 neighborhoods in each treatment group, whereas error bars represent SEs. Note that the scale of the y-axes differs. TCS, Tick Control System.
Figure 4Mean per capita human and pet encounters with ticks and cumulative numbers of cases per neighborhood of tick-borne diseases for humans and pets in study of tick-control interventions, New York, USA. A) Human encounters; B) pet encounters; C) self-reported human cases; D) pet cases. Data represent the mean of the cumulative value (+ SEM) over the 4 years of treatments (2017–2020), averaged across neighborhoods in a treatment group. Note that the scale of the y-axes differs. TCS, Tick Control System.
Cumulative diagnosed cases of tickborne diseases, averaged across the 6 residential neighborhoods in each treatment group of tick-control interventions, New York, USA*
| Cases and treatment groups | Per capita cases (SE) | Cases/neighborhood (SE) | p value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cases of diagnosed tickborne diseases in humans reported by participants, n = 130 | |||
| Control | 0.05 (0.01) | 5.17 (2.11) |
|
| Active TCS boxes | 0.05 (0.01) | 4.67 (1.91) | NS |
| Active Met52 | 0.06 (0.02) | 6.00 (2.45) | NS |
| Active TCS boxes and active Met52 | 0.06 (0.01) | 5.83 (2.38) | NS |
| Cases of diagnosed tickborne diseases in humans confirmed by healthcare providers, n = 35† | |||
| Control | 0.009 (0.00) | 1.00 (0.41) |
|
| Active TCS boxes | 0.012 (0.00) | 1.17 (0.48) | NS |
| Active Met52 | 0.019 (0.01) | 2.17 (0.88) | NS |
| Active TCS boxes and active Met52 | 0.016 (0.01) | 1.50 (0.61) | NS |
| Cases of diagnosed tick-borne diseases in outdoor pets reported by participants, n = 77 | |||
| Control | 0.17 (0.03) | 4.67 (1.91) |
|
| Active TCS boxes | 0.08 (0.02) | 2.50 (1.02) | ‡ |
| Active Met52 | 0.08 (0.03) | 2.67 (1.09) | ‡ |
| Active TCS boxes and active Met52 | 0.11 (0.04) | 3.00 (1.22) | NS |
*For detailed statistical results, see Appendix Tables 16, 18, and 19 (https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/EID/article/28/5/21-1146-App1.pdf). Data represent the mean of the cumulative value (+SEM) over the 4 years of treatments, averaged across neighborhoods in a treatment group. NS, not significant. †Cases in humans confirmed by healthcare providers were less common than cases reported by participants because some participants did not grant permission to the investigators to pursue confirmation from healthcare providers, some healthcare providers did not respond to repeated requests for information, and some diagnoses from healthcare providers did not confirm patient reports. ‡Statistically significant differences.