Martin Anne C, Chaponda Mike, Muleba Mbanga, Lupiya James, Gebhardt Mary E, Berube Sophie, Shields Timothy, Wesolowski Amy, Kobayashi Tamaki, Norris Douglas E, Impoinvil Daniel E, Chirwa Brian, Zulu Reuben, Psychas Paul, Ippolito Matthew, Moss William J
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
J Infect Dis. 2025 Apr 15;231(4):1020-1030. doi: 10.1093/infdis/jiae609.
Indoor residual spraying (IRS) is a malaria control strategy implemented before the rainy season. Nchelenge District, Zambia, is a holoendemic setting where IRS has been conducted since 2008 with little impact on malaria incidence or parasite prevalence. Pre-rainy season IRS may not reduce the post-rainy season peak abundance of the major vector Anopheles funestus.
A controlled, pretest-posttest, prospective cohort study assessed the impact of late-rainy season IRS on malaria prevalence, incidence, hazard, and vector abundance. A total of 382 individuals were enrolled across 4 household clusters, of which 2 were sprayed in April 2022 toward the end of the rainy season. Monthly household and individual surveys and indoor overnight vector collections were conducted through August 2022. Multivariate regression and time-to-event analyses estimated the impact of IRS on outcomes measured by rapid diagnostic tests, microscopy, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction.
Among participants, 72% tested positive by rapid diagnostic test at least once, and incidence by microscopy was 3.4 infections per person-year. Residing in a household in a sprayed area was associated with a 52% reduction in infection hazard (hazards ratio, 0.48; 95% CI, .29-.78) but not with changes in incidence, prevalence, or vector abundance. The study-wide entomologic inoculation rate was 34 infectious bites per person per year.
Monthly tracking of incidence and prevalence did not demonstrate meaningful changes in holoendemic transmission intensity. However, hazard of infection, which provides greater power for detecting changes in transmission, demonstrated that late-rainy season IRS reduced malaria risk.
室内滞留喷洒(IRS)是在雨季前实施的疟疾控制策略。赞比亚的恩泽伦格区是一个疟疾高度流行地区,自2008年以来一直在进行室内滞留喷洒,但对疟疾发病率或寄生虫流行率影响甚微。雨季前的室内滞留喷洒可能无法降低主要病媒——险恶按蚊在雨季过后的高峰期数量。
一项对照、前测-后测、前瞻性队列研究评估了雨季后期室内滞留喷洒对疟疾流行率、发病率、感染风险和病媒数量的影响。在4个家庭群组中总共招募了382人,其中2个群组在2022年4月雨季结束时进行了喷洒。在2022年8月之前每月进行家庭和个人调查以及室内过夜病媒采集。多变量回归和事件发生时间分析估计了室内滞留喷洒对通过快速诊断检测、显微镜检查和定量聚合酶链反应测量的结果的影响。
在参与者中,72%的人至少有一次快速诊断检测呈阳性,显微镜检查的发病率为每人每年3.4次感染。居住在喷洒区域的家庭中,感染风险降低了52%(风险比,0.48;95%置信区间,0.29 - 0.78),但发病率、流行率或病媒数量没有变化。整个研究的昆虫学接种率为每人每年34次感染叮咬。
每月对发病率和流行率的跟踪并未显示疟疾高度流行地区传播强度有有意义的变化。然而,感染风险在检测传播变化方面具有更大的效力,表明雨季后期的室内滞留喷洒降低了疟疾风险。