Abstract

BackgroundPyrethroid resistance in African vector mosquitoes is a threat to malaria control. Resistant mosquitoes can survive insecticide doses that would normally be lethal. We studied effects of such doses on Plasmodium falciparum development inside kdr-resistant Anopheles gambiae s.s. in Uganda.MethodsWe collected An. gambiae s.s. homozygous for kdr-L1014S mutation, fed them on blood samples from 42 P. falciparum-infected local patients, then exposed them either to nets treated with sub-lethal doses of deltamethrin or to untreated nets. After seven days, we dissected 692 mosquitoes and examined their midguts for oocysts. Prevalence (proportion infected) and intensity of infection (number of oocysts per infected mosquito) were recorded for each group.ResultsBoth prevalence and intensity of infection were significantly reduced in deltamethrin-exposed mosquitoes, compared to those exposed to untreated nets. With low doses (2.5–5.0 mg/m2), prevalence was reduced by 59 % (95 % CI = 22 %-78 %) and intensity by 41 % (95 % CI = 25 %-54 %). With high doses (10–16.7 mg/m2), prevalence was reduced by 80 % (95 % CI = 67 %-88 %) and intensity by 34 % (95 % CI = 20 %-46 %).ConclusionsWe showed that, with locally-sampled parasites and mosquitoes, doses of pyrethroids that are sub-lethal for resistant mosquitoes can interfere with parasite development inside mosquitoes. This mechanism could enable pyrethroid-treated nets to prevent malaria transmission despite increasing vector resistance.

Highlights

  • Pyrethroid resistance in African vector mosquitoes is a threat to malaria control

  • This study showed that deltamethrin affects development of P. falciparum in wild, kdr-L1014S resistant An. gambiae s.s. in a malaria endemic setting

  • Our study suggests that the continued use of pyrethroid treated nets might be helping to prevent failure of malaria control in Africa despite the rapid evolution of insecticide resistance, and supports the efforts to maintain the use of existing effective interventions

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Summary

Introduction

Pyrethroid resistance in African vector mosquitoes is a threat to malaria control. Resistant mosquitoes can survive insecticide doses that would normally be lethal. Increased use of insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) has contributed to substantial reductions in the global burden of malaria [1]. Various genes conferring resistance to pyrethroids are spreading rapidly through the main African malaria vectors [2, 3]. The impact of this resistance on vector control remains unclear [4]. Control failure has been associated with resistance in some areas [5], but not others [6,7,8]. Pyrethroid-treated nets reduce malaria transmission partly by repelling vectors, and partly by killing them [9].

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