Malaria Consortium Asia, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand.
College of Public Health, Medical and Veterinary Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, Australia.
J Infect Dis. 2021 Apr 27;223(12 Suppl 2):S111-S142. doi: 10.1093/infdis/jiab004.
Despite substantial reductions in malaria burden and improvement in case management, malaria remains a major public health challenge in the Asia-Pacific region. Residual malaria transmission (RMT) is the fraction of total transmission that persists after achievement of full operational coverage with effective insecticide-treated bed nets (ITNs)/long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) and/or indoor residual spray interventions. There is a critical need to standardize and share best practices for entomological, anthropological, and product development investigative protocols to meet the challenges of RMT and elimination goals.
A systematic review was conducted to describe when and where RMT is occurring, while specifically targeting ownership and usage of ITN/LLINs, indoor residual spray application, insecticide susceptibility of vectors, and human and vector biting behavior, with a focus on nighttime activities.
Sixty-six publications from 1995 to present met the inclusion criteria for closer review. Associations between local vector control coverage and use with behaviors of human and mosquito vectors varied by locality and circumstance. Consequently, the magnitude of RMT is insufficiently studied and analyzed with sparse estimates of individual exposure in communities, insufficient or incomplete observations of ITN/LLIN use, and the local human population movement into and from high-risk areas.
This review identified significant gaps or deficiencies that require urgent attention, namely, developing standardized procedures and methods to estimate risk exposure beyond the peridomestic setting, analytical approaches to measure key human-vector interactions, and seasonal location-specific agricultural or forest use calendars, and establishing the collection of longitudinal human and vector data close in time and location.
尽管疟疾负担大幅减轻,病例管理有所改善,但疟疾仍是亚太地区的一个主要公共卫生挑战。残留疟疾传播(RMT)是在充分实现有效杀虫剂处理蚊帐(ITN)/长效杀虫剂处理蚊帐(LLIN)和/或室内滞留喷洒干预措施的全覆盖后持续存在的总传播的一部分。迫切需要标准化和共享昆虫学、人类学和产品开发调查方案,以应对 RMT 和消除目标的挑战。
进行了系统评价,以描述 RMT 发生的时间和地点,同时专门针对 ITN/LLIN 的拥有和使用、室内滞留喷洒应用、病媒对杀虫剂的敏感性以及人类和病媒的叮咬行为进行描述,重点关注夜间活动。
1995 年至今的 66 篇出版物符合更密切审查的纳入标准。当地病媒控制覆盖率和人类及蚊子媒介行为之间的关联因地点和情况而异。因此,RMT 的程度研究不足且分析不足,对社区中个体暴露的估计稀疏,对 ITN/LLIN 使用的观察不足或不完整,以及当地人口向和离开高风险地区的流动。
本综述确定了需要紧急关注的重大差距或缺陷,即需要制定标准化程序和方法来估计家庭环境以外的风险暴露,衡量关键人类-病媒相互作用的分析方法,以及季节性、特定地点的农业或森林使用日历,并建立在时间和地点上接近的纵向人类和病媒数据收集。