Lindblade Kim A, Eisele Thomas P, Gimnig John E, Alaii Jane A, Odhiambo Frank, ter Kuile Feiko O, Hawley William A, Wannemuehler Kathleen A, Phillips-Howard Penelope A, Rosen Daniel H, Nahlen Bernard L, Terlouw Dianne J, Adazu Kubaje, Vulule John M, Slutsker Laurence
Division of Parasitic Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga 30333, USA.
JAMA. 2004 Jun 2;291(21):2571-80. doi: 10.1001/jama.291.21.2571.
Insecticide-treated bednets reduce malaria transmission and child morbidity and mortality in short-term trials, but this impact may not be sustainable. Previous investigators have suggested that bednet use might paradoxically increase mortality in older children through delayed acquisition of immunity to malaria.
To determine whether adherence to and public health benefits of insecticide-treated bednets can be sustained over time and whether bednet use during infancy increases all-cause mortality rates in older children in an area of intense perennial malaria transmission.
A community randomized controlled trial in western Kenya (phase 1: January 1997 to February 2000) followed by continued surveillance of adherence, entomologic parameters, morbidity indicators, and all-cause mortality (phase 2: April 1999 to February 2002), and extended demographic monitoring (January to December 2002).
A total of 130,000 residents of 221 villages in Asembo and Gem were randomized to receive insecticide-treated bednets at the start of phase 1 (111 villages) or phase 2 (110 villages).
Proportion of children younger than 5 years using insecticide-treated bednets, mean number of Anopheles mosquitoes per house, and all-cause mortality rates.
Adherence to bednet use in children younger than 5 years increased from 65.9% in phase 1 to 82.5% in phase 2 (P<.001). After 3 to 4 years of bednet use, the mean number of Anopheles mosquitoes per house in the study area was 77% lower than in a neighboring area without bednets (risk ratio, 0.23; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.15-0.35). All-cause mortality rates in infants aged 1 to 11 months were significantly reduced in intervention villages during phase 1 (hazard ratio [HR], 0.78; 95% CI, 0.67-0.90); low rates were maintained during phase 2. Mortality rates did not differ during 2002 (after up to 6 years of bednet use) between children from former intervention and former control households born during phase 1 (HR, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.86-1.19).
The public health benefits of insecticide-treated bednets were sustained for up to 6 years. There is no evidence that bednet use from birth increases all-cause mortality in older children in an area of intense perennial transmission of malaria.
在短期试验中,经杀虫剂处理的蚊帐可减少疟疾传播以及儿童发病和死亡情况,但这种影响可能无法持续。此前的研究人员曾提出,使用蚊帐可能会因延迟获得疟疾免疫力而反常地增加大龄儿童的死亡率。
确定经杀虫剂处理的蚊帐的使用依从性及其公共卫生效益能否长期维持,以及在常年疟疾传播严重的地区,婴儿期使用蚊帐是否会增加大龄儿童的全因死亡率。
在肯尼亚西部进行的一项社区随机对照试验(第1阶段:1997年1月至2000年2月),随后持续监测使用依从性、昆虫学参数、发病指标和全因死亡率(第2阶段:1999年4月至2002年2月),并进行扩展人口监测(2002年1月至12月)。
阿森博和吉姆221个村庄的共130,000名居民被随机分组,在第1阶段开始时(111个村庄)或第2阶段开始时(110个村庄)接受经杀虫剂处理的蚊帐。
5岁以下儿童使用经杀虫剂处理蚊帐的比例、每户按蚊的平均数量以及全因死亡率。
5岁以下儿童使用蚊帐的依从性从第1阶段的65.9%增至第2阶段的82.5%(P<0.001)。使用蚊帐3至4年后,研究区域内每户按蚊的平均数量比邻近未使用蚊帐地区低77%(风险比为0.23;95%置信区间[CI]为0.15 - 0.35)。在第1阶段,干预村庄1至11个月婴儿的全因死亡率显著降低(风险比[HR]为0.78;95%CI为0.67 - 0.90);第2阶段维持了低死亡率。在2002年(使用蚊帐长达6年后),第1阶段出生的前干预家庭和前对照家庭的儿童死亡率没有差异(HR为1.01;95%CI为0.86 - 1.19)。
经杀虫剂处理的蚊帐的公共卫生效益可持续长达6年。没有证据表明在常年疟疾传播严重的地区,从出生就使用蚊帐会增加大龄儿童的全因死亡率。