Importance of factors determining the effective lifetime of a mass, long-lasting, insecticidal net distribution: a sensitivity analysis
Authored by Thomas A Smith, Olivier J T Briet, Diggory Hardy
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-11-20
Sponsors:
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
USAID
Platforms:
C++
OpenMalaria
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/SwissTPH/openmalaria
Abstract
Background: Long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) reduce malaria
transmission by protecting individuals from infectious bites, and by
reducing mosquito survival. In recent years, millions of LLINs have been
distributed across sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Over time, LLINs decay
physically and chemically and are destroyed, making repeated
interventions necessary to prevent a resurgence of malaria. Because its
effects on transmission are important (more so than the effects of
individual protection), estimates of the lifetime of mass distribution
rounds should be based on the effective length of epidemiological
protection.
Methods: Simulation models, parameterised using available field data, were used to analyse how the distribution's effective lifetime depends
on the transmission setting and on LLIN characteristics. Factors
considered were the pre-intervention transmission level, initial
coverage, net attrition, and both physical and chemical decay. An
ensemble of 14 stochastic individual-based model variants for malaria in
humans was used, combined with a deterministic model for malaria in
mosquitoes.
Results: The effective lifetime was most sensitive to the
pre-intervention transmission level, with a lifetime of almost 10 years
at an entomological inoculation rate of two infectious bites per adult
per annum (ibpapa), but of little more than 2 years at 256 ibpapa. The
LLIN attrition rate and the insecticide decay rate were the next most
important parameters. The lifetime was surprisingly insensitive to
physical decay parameters, but this could change as physical integrity
gains importance with the emergence and spread of pyrethroid resistance.
Conclusions: The strong dependency of the effective lifetime on the
pre-intervention transmission level indicated that the required
distribution frequency may vary more with the local entomological
situation than with LLIN quality or the characteristics of the
distribution system. This highlights the need for malaria monitoring
both before and during intervention programmes, particularly since there
are likely to be strong variations between years and over short
distances. The majority of SSA's population falls into exposure
categories where the lifetime is relatively long, but because exposure
estimates are highly uncertain, it is necessary to consider subsequent
interventions before the end of the expected effective lifetime based on
an imprecise transmission measure.
Tags
Model
transmission
Sub-saharan africa
Plasmodium-falciparum malaria
Treated nets
Bed
nets
Pyrethroid resistance
Rural tanzania
Endemic areas
Mosquito
net