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Development of an Insecticide-Free Trapping Bednet to Control Mosquitoes and Manage Resistance in Malaria Vector Control: A New Way of Thinking

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Insecticide resistance in mosquitoes reduces the effectiveness of malaria control interventions and has reversed the gains made in reducing malaria morbidity. Hence, new strategies are needed to mitigate the spread of resistance, preserve the efficacy of available insecticides, and r...

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Autores principales: Mouhamadou, Chouaibou S., Luan, Kun, Fodjo, Behi K., West, Andre J., McCord, Marian G., Apperson, Charles S., Roe, R. Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7692756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33114752
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects11110732
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author Mouhamadou, Chouaibou S.
Luan, Kun
Fodjo, Behi K.
West, Andre J.
McCord, Marian G.
Apperson, Charles S.
Roe, R. Michael
author_facet Mouhamadou, Chouaibou S.
Luan, Kun
Fodjo, Behi K.
West, Andre J.
McCord, Marian G.
Apperson, Charles S.
Roe, R. Michael
author_sort Mouhamadou, Chouaibou S.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Insecticide resistance in mosquitoes reduces the effectiveness of malaria control interventions and has reversed the gains made in reducing malaria morbidity. Hence, new strategies are needed to mitigate the spread of resistance, preserve the efficacy of available insecticides, and restore the effectiveness of control. To combat resistance to insecticides in malaria mosquitoes, WHO recommends using long-lasting insecticide-impregnated mosquito bednets (LLINs) as well as the synergist piperonyl-butoxide (PBO). PBO enhances the insecticidal effect of the treated bednet. Unfortunately, decreases in performance of PBO-LLINs are now reported in some regions of Africa where mosquitoes are resistant to insecticides. Our objective was to develop an insecticide-free, mechanical solution that kills mosquitoes regardless of their insecticide resistance status, ultimately overcoming the problem of insecticide resistance. We designed and developed an insecticide-free mosquito trapping bednet for mass mosquito trapping and killing, the “T-Net”, and we show its efficacy compared to a conventional LLIN in Africa. Mathematical models were also developed to predict T-Net efficacy in individual homes and at the community level. ABSTRACT: Mosquito-borne malaria kills 429,000 people each year with the problem being acute in sub-Saharan Africa. The successes gained with long-lasting pyrethroid-treated bednets are now in jeopardy because of wide-spread, pyrethroid resistance in mosquitoes. Using crowd modeling theory normalized for standard bednet architecture, we were able to design an attract–trap–kill technology for mosquitoes that does not require insecticides. Using three-dimensional polyester knitting and heat fixation, trap funnels were developed with high capture efficacy with no egression under worst-case laboratory conditions. Field testing in Africa in WHO huts with Gen1-3 T (trap)-Nets validated our model, and as predicted, Gen3 had the highest efficacy with a 4.3-fold greater trap–kill rate with no deterrence or repellency compared to Permanet 2.0, the most common bednet in Africa. A T-Net population model was developed based on field data to predict community-level mosquito control compared to a pyrethroid bednet. This model showed the Gen3 non-insecticidal T-Net under field conditions in Africa against pyrethroid resistant mosquitoes was 12.7-fold more efficacious than single chemical, pyrethroid-treated nets.
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spelling pubmed-76927562020-11-28 Development of an Insecticide-Free Trapping Bednet to Control Mosquitoes and Manage Resistance in Malaria Vector Control: A New Way of Thinking Mouhamadou, Chouaibou S. Luan, Kun Fodjo, Behi K. West, Andre J. McCord, Marian G. Apperson, Charles S. Roe, R. Michael Insects Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Insecticide resistance in mosquitoes reduces the effectiveness of malaria control interventions and has reversed the gains made in reducing malaria morbidity. Hence, new strategies are needed to mitigate the spread of resistance, preserve the efficacy of available insecticides, and restore the effectiveness of control. To combat resistance to insecticides in malaria mosquitoes, WHO recommends using long-lasting insecticide-impregnated mosquito bednets (LLINs) as well as the synergist piperonyl-butoxide (PBO). PBO enhances the insecticidal effect of the treated bednet. Unfortunately, decreases in performance of PBO-LLINs are now reported in some regions of Africa where mosquitoes are resistant to insecticides. Our objective was to develop an insecticide-free, mechanical solution that kills mosquitoes regardless of their insecticide resistance status, ultimately overcoming the problem of insecticide resistance. We designed and developed an insecticide-free mosquito trapping bednet for mass mosquito trapping and killing, the “T-Net”, and we show its efficacy compared to a conventional LLIN in Africa. Mathematical models were also developed to predict T-Net efficacy in individual homes and at the community level. ABSTRACT: Mosquito-borne malaria kills 429,000 people each year with the problem being acute in sub-Saharan Africa. The successes gained with long-lasting pyrethroid-treated bednets are now in jeopardy because of wide-spread, pyrethroid resistance in mosquitoes. Using crowd modeling theory normalized for standard bednet architecture, we were able to design an attract–trap–kill technology for mosquitoes that does not require insecticides. Using three-dimensional polyester knitting and heat fixation, trap funnels were developed with high capture efficacy with no egression under worst-case laboratory conditions. Field testing in Africa in WHO huts with Gen1-3 T (trap)-Nets validated our model, and as predicted, Gen3 had the highest efficacy with a 4.3-fold greater trap–kill rate with no deterrence or repellency compared to Permanet 2.0, the most common bednet in Africa. A T-Net population model was developed based on field data to predict community-level mosquito control compared to a pyrethroid bednet. This model showed the Gen3 non-insecticidal T-Net under field conditions in Africa against pyrethroid resistant mosquitoes was 12.7-fold more efficacious than single chemical, pyrethroid-treated nets. MDPI 2020-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC7692756/ /pubmed/33114752 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects11110732 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mouhamadou, Chouaibou S.
Luan, Kun
Fodjo, Behi K.
West, Andre J.
McCord, Marian G.
Apperson, Charles S.
Roe, R. Michael
Development of an Insecticide-Free Trapping Bednet to Control Mosquitoes and Manage Resistance in Malaria Vector Control: A New Way of Thinking
title Development of an Insecticide-Free Trapping Bednet to Control Mosquitoes and Manage Resistance in Malaria Vector Control: A New Way of Thinking
title_full Development of an Insecticide-Free Trapping Bednet to Control Mosquitoes and Manage Resistance in Malaria Vector Control: A New Way of Thinking
title_fullStr Development of an Insecticide-Free Trapping Bednet to Control Mosquitoes and Manage Resistance in Malaria Vector Control: A New Way of Thinking
title_full_unstemmed Development of an Insecticide-Free Trapping Bednet to Control Mosquitoes and Manage Resistance in Malaria Vector Control: A New Way of Thinking
title_short Development of an Insecticide-Free Trapping Bednet to Control Mosquitoes and Manage Resistance in Malaria Vector Control: A New Way of Thinking
title_sort development of an insecticide-free trapping bednet to control mosquitoes and manage resistance in malaria vector control: a new way of thinking
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7692756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33114752
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects11110732
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