Bhatt S, Weiss D J, Cameron E, Bisanzio D, Mappin B, Dalrymple U, Battle K, Moyes C L, Henry A, Eckhoff P A, Wenger E A, Briët O, Penny M A, Smith T A, Bennett A, Yukich J, Eisele T P, Griffin J T, Fergus C A, Lynch M, Lindgren F, Cohen J M, Murray C L J, Smith D L, Hay S I, Cibulskis R E, Gething P W
Spatial Ecology and Epidemiology Group, Tinbergen Building, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3PS, UK.
Institute for Disease Modeling, Intellectual Ventures, 1555 132nd Ave NE, Bellevue, WA 98005, USA.
Nature. 2015 Oct 8;526(7572):207-211. doi: 10.1038/nature15535. Epub 2015 Sep 16.
Since the year 2000, a concerted campaign against malaria has led to unprecedented levels of intervention coverage across sub-Saharan Africa. Understanding the effect of this control effort is vital to inform future control planning. However, the effect of malaria interventions across the varied epidemiological settings of Africa remains poorly understood owing to the absence of reliable surveillance data and the simplistic approaches underlying current disease estimates. Here we link a large database of malaria field surveys with detailed reconstructions of changing intervention coverage to directly evaluate trends from 2000 to 2015, and quantify the attributable effect of malaria disease control efforts. We found that Plasmodium falciparum infection prevalence in endemic Africa halved and the incidence of clinical disease fell by 40% between 2000 and 2015. We estimate that interventions have averted 663 (542-753 credible interval) million clinical cases since 2000. Insecticide-treated nets, the most widespread intervention, were by far the largest contributor (68% of cases averted). Although still below target levels, current malaria interventions have substantially reduced malaria disease incidence across the continent. Increasing access to these interventions, and maintaining their effectiveness in the face of insecticide and drug resistance, should form a cornerstone of post-2015 control strategies.
自2000年以来,一场协同开展的抗击疟疾运动使撒哈拉以南非洲地区的干预措施覆盖率达到了前所未有的水平。了解这一防控努力的效果对于为未来的防控规划提供依据至关重要。然而,由于缺乏可靠的监测数据以及当前疾病估计方法过于简单,非洲不同流行病学环境下疟疾干预措施的效果仍知之甚少。在此,我们将一个庞大的疟疾现场调查数据库与对不断变化的干预措施覆盖率的详细重建相联系,以直接评估2000年至2015年的趋势,并量化疟疾防控努力的归因效果。我们发现,2000年至2015年间,非洲疟疾流行地区的恶性疟原虫感染率减半,临床疾病发病率下降了40%。我们估计,自2000年以来,干预措施已避免了6.63亿(5.42 - 7.53可信区间)例临床病例。经杀虫剂处理的蚊帐是最广泛使用的干预措施,是迄今最大的贡献因素(避免病例的68%)。尽管仍低于目标水平,但目前的疟疾干预措施已大幅降低了整个非洲大陆的疟疾发病率。增加这些干预措施的可及性,并在面对杀虫剂和药物耐药性时保持其有效性,应成为2015年后防控策略的基石。