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| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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As part of the efficacy trial, we assessed some standard entomologic parameters: the number of indoor resting mosquitoes, house exiting behavior, the proportion of mosquitoes infected with Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites, and insecticide resistance. We also assessed the effect of several human factors on the number of blood fed mosquitoes found resting indoors. The most important of these is adherence, which is whether the individual owning the net actually slept under a properly deployed net during the night before resting mosquitoes were collected. We also measured the impact of the number of bed nets in houses and the time since re-treatment of nets with insecticide on numbers of fed mosquitoes.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Asembo is divided into 79 villages largely defined by clan relationships. Most inhabitants of Asembo live in traditional houses with mud walls and thatched roofs. The eaves of most houses are open, allowing for unimpeded entry and exit of mosquitoes. Family compounds, consisting of one or more houses, are separated from each other by surrounding farmland. Most of the population practices subsistence agriculture, with the main crops being maize, millet, cassava, and groundnuts. In August 1996, 40 of the 79 villages in Asembo were randomly selected by public lottery to receive bed nets. In November and December 1996, bed nets (polyester, 156 denier; Siamdutch Mosquito Netting Co., Bangkok, Thailand) were distributed to cover all sleeping spaces in the intervention villages. Bed nets were pretreated with permethrin (Peripel®; AgrEvo, Berlin, Germany) at a dose of 500 mg/m2 and re-treated at approximately six-month intervals. Details of the study area and design are provided by Phillips-Howard and others.9,10
Entomologic surveillance. Mosquito collections were conducted in conjunction with quarterly adherence monitoring,15 beginning in March 1997, three months after the distribution of bed nets to intervention villages. Houses for sampling were selected by two-stage cluster sampling. Each quarter, 10 intervention and 10 control villages were randomly selected with a probability proportional to size and, within each village, one house was randomly selected for sampling. The nine nearest neighbors were also included in the sample. Additional houses were sampled when time permitted while fewer than 10 houses were sampled if the collections were not completed by 10:00 AM. Observations were made in 853 houses from 40 intervention villages and 682 houses from 36 control villages. Thus, samples were taken from 76 of 79 villages. Between 4:30 AM and 6:00 AM, houses were visited to observe ITN use by the residents. The number of bed nets and people sleeping in the house was recorded, along with the number of people directly observed to be sleeping under bed nets. The entomology team followed-up the adherence monitoring with a pyrethrum spray collection (PSC) between 7:00 AM and 10:00 AM. Briefly, white sheets were laid upon the floor and over the furniture within the house. Two collectors, one inside the house and one outside, sprayed around the eaves with 0.025% pyrethrum emulsifiable concentrate with 0.1% piperonyl butoxide in kerosene. The collector inside the house then sprayed the roof and walls. The house was closed for 1015 minutes, after which dead mosquitoes were collected from the sheets and transferred to the laboratory on moist filter paper inside petri dishes.
Evaluation of house exiting rates. Since PSC collections may be biased by differential exit rates,1618 we tested the hypothesis that blood fed mosquitoes are more likely to exit households with ITNs compared with those without ITNs. Compounds were selected that had two houses that could be matched based upon size, construction, and the number of occupants. One house was randomly selected to receive bed nets. On the night before collections were made, a Colombian curtain19 was hung around half of each house so that mosquitoes could enter and exit on two sides while exiting mosquitoes would be captured on the remaining two sides. Exiting mosquitoes were collected from the curtain at midnight and just before dawn. Indoor resting mosquitoes were collected from inside the house the next morning by PSC.
Laboratory processing. All anophelines were identified and sorted by abdominal status (fed, unfed, gravid, half-gravid). Mosquitoes were then placed individually in tubes and desiccated over calcium sulfate. Dried mosquitoes were tested for the presence of P. falciparum sporozoite antigen by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).20 Due to constraints on time and personnel, a random sample accounting for 65% of all anophelines collected was selected for testing. A sample of An. gambiae s.l. was identified to species by a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) as An. gambiae s.s. or An. arabiensis.21
Insecticide susceptibility/resistance. During the rainy seasons of 1997, indoor resting mosquitoes were collected using hand aspirators from intervention and control houses for resistance monitoring. Because so few mosquitoes were collected from intervention houses, fed and gravid mosquitoes were allowed to lay eggs and assays were performed on females of the F1 generation using World Health Organization test kits.22 When adult females of the F1 generation were three days old, they were exposed to 0.25% permethrin test paper for periods ranging from 10 to 90 minutes. Each test paper was used no more than four times and permethrin concentrations were confirmed by gas chromatography on every third paper used. At least 150 mosquitoes were assayed from intervention and control areas. After exposure, mosquitoes were transferred to paper cups and provided 5% sugar solution. Delayed mortality was recorded at 24 hours post-exposure. Similar procedures were performed using untreated paper to act as controls. Results were discarded if mortality was > 20% in the controls.
Bioassays. Bioassays were performed on a random sample of ITNs at approximately three-month intervals to assess the killing efficacy of the insecticide residues on a laboratory colony of An. gambiae s.s. with known susceptibility to permethrin. A bioassay cone23 was attached to one side of the net and mosquitoes were introduced into the cone. Mosquitoes were exposed for three minutes and then removed to paper cups. The mosquitoes were provided with sugar water and delayed mortality was assessed at 24 hours post-exposure. Two replicates with 10 mosquitoes per replicate were done on each net. During each bioassay, a similar procedure was performed twice on an untreated net to serve as a control. If control mortality was > 20%, results from the bioassays were discarded. At baseline and again after the first round of re-dipping, 10 nets were randomly selected and insecticide residues measured by gas chromatography on 10 cm x 10 cm samples from the side and top of each net. All gas-liquid chromatographic analyses were performed by extracting samples in 10 mL of 0.3% didecylphthalate in chloroform and agitating for 30 minutes. One microliter of extract was injected into a gas-liquid chromatography system using a mega-bore capillary column of fused-silica quartz and a flame ionization detector. For quantification, relative responses were compared with internal standards.24
Statistical analysis. The number of fed indoor resting mosquitoes in intervention houses was compared with the number of fed indoor resting mosquitoes in control houses using repeated measures Poisson regression. The analysis used an exchangeable correlation structure that assumed correlations were the same among all pairs of houses within the same village and quarter of collection. Separate univariate analyses were done using the same methods to assess how the number of ITNs within a house, the time since last re-treatment (or initial bed net distribution), and adherence of the residents (defined as the number of household residents who slept under their ITNs the night before the collection was made) affected the number of indoor resting mosquitoes. Due to the high colinearity among variables (P < 0.001 by Pearsons correlation analysis for all comparisons), a single multivariate analysis was not performed. The proportion of An. gambiae s.s. versus An. arabiensis, the exit rate of blood fed mosquitoes, and the sporozoite infection rates in intervention and control areas were compared by a chi-square test.
| RESULTS |
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Exiting rates of blood fed mosquitoes were not significantly different in houses with ITNs compared with houses without them for either An. gambiae s.s. (0% versus 14.5%;
2 = 1.00, P = 0.316) or An. arabiensis (25% versus 14.3%:
2 = 0.39, P = 0.348). However, blood fed An. funestus were significantly more likely to exit houses with bed nets than those without bed nets (33.3% versus 4.3%:
2 = 14.3, P < 0.001). Based upon a subset of An. gambiae s.s. identified to species by a PCR, the proportion of An. gambiae s.s. was higher in intervention villages compared with control villages, but this difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.192). In intervention houses, significantly fewer An. gambiae s.l. were found infected with P. falciparum sporozoites (0.8% versus 3.4%; P = 0.026). The sporozoite rate in An. Funestus was higher in intervention villages (5.0%) than in control villages (3.0%). However, only 20 An. funestus from intervention villages were tested for the presence of P. falciparum sporozoite antigen and the difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.624). The sporozoite rate for all species combined was 1.2% in intervention villages compared with 3.4% in control villages (P = 0.054).
Multiplying indoor resting densities of fed mosquitoes by the sporozoite rates is not a true entomologic inoculation rate, but does provide a relative assessment of transmission intensity in intervention and control areas. Based upon these calculations, we estimated that transmission by An. gambiae s.l. was reduced by 91.8% while transmission by An. funestus was reduced by 90.6%. Overall, transmission of P. falciparum in intervention villages during the two-year period was estimated to be 90.9% lower than in control villages.
Bioassays with An. gambiae s.s. indicated that bed nets impregnated with permethrin less than six months before the test were effective in killing an average of 86.2% (range = 48100%) of mosquitoes. The killing effect decreased to 55.4% (range = 1495%) in bed nets that had been treated 68 months previously. Analysis by gas chromatography after the first redipping indicated our re-treatment procedure attained permethrin doses of approximately 500 mg/m2 on all bed nets examined.
The degree of insecticide resistance was evaluated during the first year of intervention using probits to model the relationship between exposure time and mortality and F1 females. The exposure time required to achieve 50% mortality (LT50) was estimated to be less than 10 minutes for mosquitoes collected in either control or intervention villages.
| DISCUSSION |
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The ITNs did not affect all mosquito species to the same degree, with An. funestus the most sensitive and Cx. quinquefaciatus the least sensitive. Anopheles funestus has been noted to be very susceptible to chemical control, and spraying campaigns have reported apparent eradications of this species from small foci.29 Similarly, this species was most strongly affected by the presence of ITNs, although we cannot discount the possibility that our estimates of An. funestus in intervention houses were biased by the higher exit rate from houses with ITNs. In contrast to previous studies,1618 Mathenge and others30 found that An. gambiae s.s. was equally likely to enter houses with ITNs compared with those without them, although this species was more likely to exit before obtaining a blood meal. In the current study, we did not find any evidence of an increase in the exit rates of blood fed An. gambiae s.s. from houses with bed nets. These observations suggest that An. gambiae s.s., unlike An. funestus, is affected by the insecticide only at very close ranges. Similar to observations in coastal Kenya3 and Tanzania,31 bed nets had little impact on indoor resting densities of Cx. quinquefaciatus. Field and laboratory studies have demonstrated this species to be less susceptible to permethrin than anopheline mosquitoes.32,33
A change was also noted in the sporozoite rates of anophelines collected in intervention areas. The overall sporozoite rate was 3.4% in control villages and 1.2% in intervention villages. Most of the change in sporozoite rates was due to a reduction in the sporozoite rate in An. gambiae s.l. Only 20 specimens from intervention areas were captured for testing for sporozoite antigen and data were insufficient to evaluate the effect of bed nets on the sporozoite rate in An. funestus. Changes in the sporozoite or parity rates have been interpreted as evidence that ITNs have a community level effect upon the vector population. Gimnig and others34 demonstrated that indoor biting rates were lower in control houses located near intervention villages compared with control houses located further from intervention villages, suggesting that ITNs caused a reduction in the vector population in and around intervention villages. The decrease in sporozoite rates also suggests that widespread use of ITNs in the Asembo Bay study area had an impact on the vector population.34
By multiplying the number of fed indoor resting mosquitoes by the sporozoite rates, we were able to estimate the relative transmission intensity for intervention and control areas. For An. gambiae s.l., we estimated a decrease of 91.8% in the number of infected, indoor resting females that had fed the night before. We estimated a 90.6% decrease in the number of infected, indoor resting An. funestus that had fed the night before. Overall, we estimated that ITNs reduced transmission by more than 90% in the Asembo study area.
The linking of entomologic surveillance data with adherence monitoring allowed us to assess how adherence, the time since redipping, and the number of nets within a house affect the efficacy of ITNs against vector mosquitoes. Adherence, the time since redipping, and the number of ITNs within a house all had a significant impact on indoor resting densities of fed An. gambiae s.l. Experimental hut trials in The Gambia indicated that when an unprotected person slept in a house with another person who was using an ITN, that person received fewer mosquito bites than they would have if they had been alone, suggesting that the presence of a treated bed net may confer protection to the occupants of a house.16 While this appeared to be true for An. funestus, there was no difference in the indoor resting densities of An. gambiae s.l. in houses with ITNs that were not in use compared with control houses. This indicates that proper and consistent use of ITNs is necessary to receive their full benefit. Houses in which bed nets had been treated more than six months before the collection date had similar numbers of An. gambiae s.l. compared with controls. The dose response of decreasing mosquito densities with increasing numbers of nets was somewhat unexpected. Although houses with more nets had more total insecticide, there were usually more people in those houses who would be expected to attract more mosquitoes. Separate analyses indicated a weak, non-significant trend of increasing numbers of An. gambiae s.l. with increasing numbers of residents in control houses. However, this trend was reversed in houses with ITNs, suggesting that the repellent effects of the insecticide had a stronger effect on indoor resting densities than the attractive volatiles given off by large numbers of people. The effect of increasing numbers of ITNs is also likely modulated by the size of the house. In larger houses, the nets and insecticide are less concentrated, and increasing the number of nets within larger houses might have a less pronounced effect on An. gambiae s.l. indoor resting densities. The number of indoor resting An. funestus was lower in intervention houses whether or not people were compliant and whether or not the bed nets had been treated recently. Anopheles funestus was also strongly affected by ITNs if at least one was present within the house. These observations indicate that the effectiveness of bed nets may be determined not only by the willingness of people to treat their bed nets and sleep under them, but also on the vector species present in a given area. In areas where An. funestus is the predominant vector, the mere presence of bed nets may be enough to significantly reduce transmission whereas, in areas where An. gambiae s.l. is the predominant vector, steps must be taken to ensure that bed nets are re-treated every six months and that people deploy them regularly.
Assessment of insecticide susceptibility/resistance was possible during only the first study year, since very few mosquitoes were collected in intervention areas during the second year. Vulule and others35 found evidence for reduced susceptibility to permethrin in a small study less than 50 km from the Asembo study area, although subsequent studies in the same area suggested that selection for permethrin tolerance by treated bed nets was minimal.36 The LT50s were less than 10 minutes for mosquitoes collected from control and intervention houses. This is lower than the LT50 of 13 minutes found at the baseline of the study conducted by Vulule and others, indicating high susceptibility in the first year.35 Insecticide use in this area, for either public health or agriculture, was low prior to this study and selection for resistance was minimal. The low numbers of indoor resting adult anophelines in intervention houses during the second year of the study suggest that resistance levels remained low. However, continued monitoring is necessary to ensure that permethrin remains effective against anophelines in this area.
This study has shown that ITNs significantly reduce indoor resting densities of malaria vectors and sporozoite rates in an area of intense, perennial transmission. Permethrin tolerance of malaria vectors was low. However, this study also demonstrated that ITNs are less effective if not used consistently and if not re-treated regularly. Malaria control programs that incorporate permethrin-treated bed nets as an integral part of a malaria control strategy must take steps to educate communities on the need to use ITNs every night and to re-treat their nets appropriately.
Acknowledgments: We thank George Olang and the entomology staff at the Centre for Vector Biology and Control Research of the Kenya Medical Research Institute for organizing the mosquito collections. We are grateful to Dwight Mount for conducting the gas chromatographic analysis for measuring permethrin concentrations, and to Joseph Nduati and Lucy Njeri for conducting the sporozoite ELISA and for PCR identification of An. gambiae s.l. We also are grateful to the residents of Asembo Bay for their support and cooperation throughout the study. This paper has been published with the permission of the director of the Kenya Medical Research Institute.
Financial support: The ITN project was funded by the United States Agency for International Development.
Disclaimer: The opinions or assertions contained in this manuscript are the private ones of the authors and are not to be construed as official or reflecting the views of the U.S. Public Health Service or Department of Health and Human Services. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Public Health Service or Department of Health and Human Services.
Authors addresses: John E. Gimnig, Margarette S. Kolczak, Penelope A. Phillips-Howard, Feiko O. ter Kuile, Allen W. Hightower, William A. Hawley, Division of Parasitic Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Mailstop F-22, 4770 Buford Highway, Atlanta, GA 30341. John M. Vulule, Centre for Vector Biology and Control Research, Kenya Medical Research Institute, PO Box 1578, Kisumu, Kenya. Terrence Q. Lo, Department of Epidemiology, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322. Luna Kamau, Centre for Biotechnology Research and Development, Kenya Medical Research Institute, PO Box 54840, Nairobi, Kenya. Evan M. Mathenge, Department of Zoology, University of Nairobi, PO Box 30197, Nairobi, Kenya. Bernard L. Nahlen, Roll Back Malaria, World Health Organization, Avenue Appia 20, 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland.
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