Is outdoor vector control needed for malaria elimination? An individual-based modelling study
Authored by Lin Zhu, Whitney A Qualls, John M Marshall, Sekou F Traore, Seydou Doumbia, Yosef Schlein, John C Beier, WayWay M Hlaing, Gunter C Muller, Kristopher L Arheart
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1186/s12936-017-1920-y
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: Residual malaria transmission has been reported in many
areas even with adequate indoor vector control coverage, such as
long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs). The increased insecticide
resistance in Anopheles mosquitoes has resulted in reduced efficacy of
the widely used indoor tools and has been linked with an increase in
outdoor malaria transmission. There are considerations of incorporating
outdoor interventions into integrated vector management (IVM) to achieve
malaria elimination; however, more information on the combination of
tools for effective control is needed to determine their utilization.
Methods: A spatial individual-based model was modified to simulate the
environment and malaria transmission activities in a hypothetical,
isolated African village setting. LLINs and outdoor attractive toxic
sugar bait (ATSB) stations were used as examples of indoor and outdoor
interventions, respectively. Different interventions and lengths of
efficacy periods were tested. Simulations continued for 420 days, and
each simulation scenario was repeated 50 times. Mosquito populations,
entomologic inoculation rates (EIRs), probabilities of local mosquito
extinction, and proportion of time when the annual EIR was reduced below
one were compared between different intervention types and efficacy
periods.
Results: In the village setting with clustered houses, the combinational
intervention of 50\% LLINs plus outdoor ATSBs significantly reduced
mosquito population and EIR in short term, increased the probability of
local mosquito extinction, and increased the time when annual EIR is
less than one per person compared to 50\% LLINs alone; outdoor ATSBs
alone significantly reduced mosquito population in short term, increased
the probability of mosquito extinction, and increased the time when
annual EIR is less than one compared to 50\% LLINs alone, but there was
no significant difference in EIR in short term between 50\% LLINs and
outdoor ATSBs. In the village setting with dispersed houses, the
combinational intervention of 50\% LLINs plus outdoor ATSBs
significantly reduced mosquito population in short term, increased the
probability of mosquito extinction, and increased the time when annual
EIR is less than one per person compared to 50\% LLINs alone; outdoor
ATSBs alone significantly reduced mosquito population in short term, but
there were no significant difference in the probability of mosquito
extinction and the time when annual EIR is less than one between 50\%
LLIN and outdoor ATSBs; and there was no significant difference in EIR
between all three interventions. A minimum of 2 months of efficacy
period is needed to bring out the best possible effect of the vector
control tools, and to achieve long-term mosquito reduction, a minimum of
3 months of efficacy period is needed.
Conclusions: The results highlight the value of incorporating outdoor
vector control into IVM as a supplement to traditional indoor practices
for malaria elimination in Africa, especially in village settings of
clustered houses where LLINs alone is far from sufficient.
Tags
Agent-based model
Anopheles gambiae
Insecticide-treated nets
Host-seeking
Anopheles-gambiae diptera
Plasmodium-falciparum malaria
Western
kenya
Reproductive fitness
Sporozoite rates
Individual-based
model
Malaria elimination
Outdoor vector control
Residual malaria
transmission
Llin
Atsb
Sugar bait atsb
Pyrethroid resistance area
Field-evaluation