Abstract

The aetiological agent of Chagas disease, Trypanosoma cruzi, is a key human pathogen afflicting most populations of Latin America. This vectorborne parasite is transmitted by haematophageous triatomines, whose control by large‐scale insecticide spraying has been the main strategy to limit the impact of the disease for over 25 years. While those international initiatives have been successful in highly endemic areas, this systematic approach is now challenged by the emergence of insecticide resistance and by its low efficacy in controlling species that are only partially adapted to human habitat. In this contribution, we review evidences that Chagas disease control shall now be entering a second stage that will rely on a better understanding of triatomines adaptive potential, which requires promoting microevolutionary studies and –omic approaches. Concomitantly, we show that our knowledge of the determinants of the evolution of T. cruzi high diversity and low virulence remains too limiting to design evolution‐proof strategies, while such attributes may be part of the future of Chagas disease control after the 2020 WHO's target of regional elimination of intradomiciliary transmission has been reached. We should then aim at developing a theory of T. cruzi virulence evolution that we anticipate to provide an interesting enrichment of the general theory according to the specificities of transmission of this very generalist stercorarian trypanosome. We stress that many ecological data required to better understand selective pressures acting on vector and parasite populations are already available as they have been meticulously accumulated in the last century of field research. Although more specific information will surely be needed, an effective research strategy would be to integrate data into the conceptual and theoretical framework of evolutionary ecology and life‐history evolution that provide the quantitative backgrounds necessary to understand and possibly anticipate adaptive responses to public health interventions.

Highlights

  • After the success of international initiatives in reducing the abundance of key domestic vector species in highly endemic areas, new challenges are emerging for the future of Chagas disease control

  • These new challenges will require a microevolutionary thinking that is slowly growing to assess the evolutionary potential of T. cruzi and its triatomine vectors and their adaptive response to control interventions

  • | 481 from life-­history evolution, a good evolutionary understanding could be rapidly gained. Such basic knowledge will naturally find itself at the heart of future strategies that will undoubtedly target the long-­ term sustainability of today’s achievements in highly endemic areas and the further reduction in disease incidence in other areas where secondary vectors may be adapting to the human habitat

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Summary

REVIEW AND SYNTHESES

Alheli Flores-Ferrer1,2 | Olivier Marcou1 | Etienne Waleckx3 | Eric Dumonteil4 | Sébastien Gourbière. Funding information CONACYT (Person Number 239540); Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología Basic Science, Grant/Award Number: CB2015258752; National Problems, Grant/Award Number: PN2015-893

Behavioural changes X X
CL Brener
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