Killeen Gerry F
Ifakara Health Institute, Environmental Health and Ecological Sciences Thematic Group, Ifakara, Morogoro, United Republic of Tanzania.
Malar J. 2014 Aug 23;13:330. doi: 10.1186/1475-2875-13-330.
Long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) and indoor residual spraying (IRS) interventions can reduce malaria transmission by targeting mosquitoes when they feed upon sleeping humans and/or rest inside houses, livestock shelters or other man-made structures. However, many malaria vector species can maintain robust transmission, despite high coverage of LLINs/IRS containing insecticides to which they are physiologically fully susceptible, because they exhibit one or more behaviours that define the biological limits of achievable impact with these interventions: (1) Natural or insecticide-induced avoidance of contact with treated surfaces within houses and early exit from them, thus minimizing exposure hazard of vectors which feed indoors upon humans; (2) Feeding upon humans when they are active and unprotected outdoors, thereby attenuating personal protection and any consequent community-wide suppression of transmission; (3) Feeding upon animals, thus minimizing contact with insecticides targeted at humans or houses; (4) Resting outdoors, away from insecticide-treated surfaces of nets, walls and roofs. Residual malaria transmission is, therefore, defined as all forms of transmission that can persist after achieving full universal coverage with effective LLINs and/or IRS containing active ingredients to which local vector populations are fully susceptible. Residual transmission is sufficiently intense across most of the tropics to render malaria elimination infeasible without new or improved vector control methods. Many novel or improved vector control strategies to address residual transmission are emerging that either: (1) Enhance control of adult vectors that enter houses to feed and/or rest by killing, repelling or excluding them; (2) Kill or repel adult mosquitoes when they attack people outdoors; (3) Kill adult mosquitoes when they attack livestock; (4) Kill adult mosquitoes when they feed upon sugar or; (5) Kill immature mosquitoes in aquatic habitats. To date, none of these options has sufficient supporting evidence to justify full-scale programmatic implementation. Concerted investment in their rigorous selection, development and evaluation is required over the coming decade to enable control and, ultimately, elimination of residual malaria transmission. In the meantime, national programmes may assess options for addressing residual transmission under programmatic conditions through pilot studies with strong monitoring, evaluation and operational research components, similar to the Onchocerciasis Control Programme.
长效驱虫蚊帐(LLINs)和室内滞留喷洒(IRS)干预措施可在蚊子叮咬熟睡的人类和/或在房屋、牲畜棚舍或其他人造建筑内休息时对其进行针对性防治,从而减少疟疾传播。然而,尽管长效驱虫蚊帐/室内滞留喷洒蚊帐中所含杀虫剂的覆盖率很高,且当地疟疾媒介对这些杀虫剂在生理上完全敏感,但许多疟疾媒介物种仍能保持强劲的传播能力,因为它们表现出一种或多种行为,这些行为界定了这些干预措施可实现影响的生物学限度:(1)自然或因杀虫剂诱导而避免接触房屋内的处理过的表面并早早离开房屋,从而将在室内叮咬人类的媒介的接触风险降至最低;(2)在人类户外活动且未受保护时叮咬人类,从而削弱个人防护以及随之而来的对整个社区传播的抑制;(3)叮咬动物,从而尽量减少与针对人类或房屋的杀虫剂的接触;(4)在户外休息,远离蚊帐、墙壁和屋顶等经过杀虫剂处理的表面。因此,残留疟疾传播被定义为在实现对有效长效驱虫蚊帐和/或含有当地媒介种群完全敏感的活性成分的室内滞留喷洒进行全面普及覆盖之后仍能持续存在的所有传播形式。在热带地区的大部分地区,残留传播强度足以使疟疾消除在没有新的或改进的媒介控制方法的情况下变得不可行。许多旨在应对残留传播的新颖或改进的媒介控制策略正在涌现,这些策略要么:(1)通过杀死、驱赶或排除进入房屋进食和/或休息的成年媒介来加强对它们的控制;(2)在成年蚊子在户外攻击人类时杀死或驱赶它们;(3)在成年蚊子攻击牲畜时杀死它们;(4)在成年蚊子吸食糖分食物时杀死它们;(5)在水生栖息地杀死未成熟蚊子。迄今为止,这些选项中没有一个有足够的支持证据来证明全面的计划实施是合理的。在未来十年需要对它们进行严格的筛选、开发和评估进行协调一致的投资,以实现对残留疟疾传播的控制并最终消除这种传播。与此同时,国家项目可以通过开展具有强大监测、评估和行动研究组成部分的试点研究,类似于盘尾丝虫病控制项目,来评估在项目条件下应对残留传播的选项。