Abstract

BackgroundMalaria control today is threatened by widespread insecticide resistance in vector populations. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends the use of a mixture of unrelated insecticides for indoor residual spraying (IRS) and long-lasting insecticidal nets (LNs) or as a combination of interventions for improved vector control and insecticide resistance management. Studies investigating the efficacy of these different strategies are necessary.MethodsThe efficacy of Interceptor® G2 LN, a newly developed LN treated with a mixture of chlorfenapyr (a pyrrole) and alpha-cypermethrin (a pyrethroid), was compared to a combined chlorfenapyr IRS and Interceptor® LN (a standard alpha-cypermethrin LN) intervention in experimental huts in Cove Southern Benin, against wild, free-flying, pyrethroid-resistant Anopheles gambiae s.l. A direct comparison was also made with a pyrethroid-only net (Interceptor® LN) alone and chorfenapyr IRS alone.ResultsWHO resistance bioassays performed during the trial demonstrated a pyrethroid resistance frequency of >90% in the wild An. gambiae s.l. from the Cove hut site. Mortality in the control (untreated net) hut was 5%. Mortality with Interceptor® LN (24%) was lower than with chlorfenapyr IRS alone (59%, P < 0.001). The combined Interceptor® LN and chlorfenapyr IRS intervention and the mixture net (Interceptor® G2 LN) provided significantly higher mortality rates (73 and 76%, respectively) and these did not differ significantly between both treatments (P = 0.15). Interceptor LN induced 46% blood-feeding inhibition compared to the control untreated net, while chlorfenapyr IRS alone provided none. Both mixture/combination strategies also induced substantial levels of blood-feeding inhibition (38% with combined interventions and 30% with Interceptor® G2 LN). A similar trend of improved mortality of pyrethroid-resistant An. gambiae s.l. from Cove was observed with Interceptor® G2 LN (79%) compared to Interceptor LN (42%, P < 0.001) in WHO tunnel tests.ConclusionThe use of chlorfenapyr and alpha-cypermethrin together as a mixture on nets (Interceptor® G2 LN) or a combined chlorfenapyr IRS and pyrethroid LN intervention provides improved control of pyrethroid-resistant malaria vectors by inducing significantly higher levels of mortality through the chlorfenapyr component and providing personal protection through the pyrethroid component. Both strategies are comparable in their potential to improve the control of malaria transmitted by pyrethroid resistant mosquito vectors.

Highlights

  • Malaria control today is threatened by widespread insecticide resistance in vector populations

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) susceptibility tests performed on F1 adults An. gambiae s.l. mosquitoes collected as larvae from breeding sites near in the experimental hut station in Cove showed high survival rates (>90%) after exposure to pyrethroids and organochlorine DDT-treated papers confirming the high levels of resistance in the Cove vector population to these insecticides

  • Deterrency with ­Interceptor® long-lasting insecticidal nets (LN) (44%) was higher than with I­nterceptor® G2 LN (19%) and this did not change significantly compared to the combined chlorfenapyr indoor residual spraying (IRS) and ­Interceptor® LN hut (49%)

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Summary

Introduction

Malaria control today is threatened by widespread insecticide resistance in vector populations. The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends the use of a mixture of unrelated insecticides for indoor residual spraying (IRS) and long-lasting insecticidal nets (LNs) or as a combination of interventions for improved vector control and insecticide resistance management. Indoor residual spraying (IRS) and long-lasting insecticidal nets (LNs) have contributed immensely to recent reductions in malaria burden [1]. The sustainability of this impact is threatened by widespread resistance to the insecticides delivered through these interventions, especially pyrethroids [2]. Pyrethroids are currently the only insecticide used on WHOPES-recommended LNs owing to their efficacy, safety, low cost, and excito-repellent effect on mosquitoes, an insecticidal property which is essential for preventing mosquito biting [3]. The use of unrelated insecticides in mixtures or as a combined intervention for malaria vector control is recommended by the Global Plan for Insecticide Resistance Management (GPIRM) because it has the potential to preserve insecticide susceptibility in areas where resistance to both active ingredients is still rare [2, 6]

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