National Malaria Control Programme, Cotonou, Benin.
Ministry of Health, Cotonou, Benin.
Malar J. 2019 Feb 11;18(1):37. doi: 10.1186/s12936-019-2656-7.
Insecticide-based interventions have averted more than 500 million malaria cases since 2000, but insecticide resistance in mosquitoes could bring about a rebound in disease and mortality. This study investigated whether insecticide resistance was associated with increased incidence of clinical malaria.
In an area of southern Benin with insecticide resistance and high use of insecticide-treated nets (ITNs), malaria morbidity and insecticide resistance were measured simultaneously in 30 clusters (villages or collections of villages) multiple times over the course of 2 years. Insecticide resistance frequencies were measured using the standard World Health Organization bioassay test. Malaria morbidity was measured by cases recorded at health facilities both in the whole population using routinely collected data and in a passively followed cohort of children under 5 years old.
There was no evidence that incidence of malaria from routinely collected data was higher in clusters with resistance frequencies above the median, either in children aged under 5 (RR = 1.27 (95% CI 0.81-2.00) p = 0.276) or in individuals aged 5 or over (RR = 1.74 (95% CI 0.91-3.34) p = 0.093). There was also no evidence that incidence was higher in clusters with resistance frequencies above the median in the passively followed cohort (RR = 1.11 (0.52-2.35) p = 0.777).
This study found no association between frequency of resistance and incidence of clinical malaria in an area where ITNs are the principal form of vector control. This may be because, as other studies have shown, ITNs continue to offer some protection from malaria even in the presence of insecticide resistance. Irrespective of resistance, nets provide only partial protection so the development of improved or supplementary vector control tools is required to reduce Africa's unacceptably high malaria burden.
自 2000 年以来,基于杀虫剂的干预措施已经避免了超过 5 亿例疟疾病例,但蚊子对杀虫剂的抗药性可能导致疾病和死亡率反弹。本研究调查了杀虫剂抗性是否与临床疟疾发病率的增加有关。
在贝宁南部一个杀虫剂耐药性高且大量使用驱虫蚊帐(ITN)的地区,在两年的时间里,通过多次在 30 个集群(村庄或村庄集合)中同时测量疟疾发病率和杀虫剂抗性,使用标准的世界卫生组织生物测定试验来测量杀虫剂抗性频率。疟疾发病率通过在整个人群中使用常规收集的数据记录在医疗机构中记录的病例以及在 5 岁以下儿童的被动随访队列中进行测量。
在常规收集的数据中,无论是在 5 岁以下儿童(RR=1.27(95%CI 0.81-2.00)p=0.276)还是 5 岁以上人群(RR=1.74(95%CI 0.91-3.34)p=0.093)中,具有高于中位数的抗性频率的集群中疟疾发病率均没有证据表明更高。在被动随访队列中,具有高于中位数的抗性频率的集群中发病率也没有证据更高(RR=1.11(0.52-2.35)p=0.777)。
在 ITN 是主要媒介控制形式的地区,本研究未发现抗性频率与临床疟疾发病率之间存在关联。这可能是因为,正如其他研究表明的那样,即使存在杀虫剂抗性,蚊帐仍能继续提供一定程度的疟疾保护。无论是否存在抗性,蚊帐只能提供部分保护,因此需要开发改进或补充的媒介控制工具,以降低非洲高得不可接受的疟疾负担。