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Indoor and outdoor malaria transmission in two ecological settings in rural Mali: implications for vector control
by
Keïta, Moussa
, Krogstad, Donald J.
, Sissoko, Ibrahim
, Diakité, Mahamadou
, Coulibaly, Mamadou B.
, Sogoba, Nafomon
, Doumbia, Seydou O.
, Diawara, Sory Ibrahim
, Sodio, Ambièlè Bernard
, Konaté, Drissa
, Shaffer, Jeffrey G.
, Traoré, Sekou F.
, Touré, Mahamoudou
, Doumbia, Sidy
in
Abdomen
/ An. gambiae complex
/ Aquatic insects
/ Bayesian analysis
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Biting
/ Blood
/ Blood meals
/ Collections
/ Consent
/ Disease transmission
/ DNA
/ ELISA
/ Entomological Inoculation Rate (EIR)
/ Entomology
/ Environmental aspects
/ Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
/ Health aspects
/ Human diseases
/ Human landing catch
/ Identification
/ Indoor environments
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Inoculation
/ Insect bites
/ Insecticides
/ Laboratories
/ Malaria
/ Malaria transmission
/ Microbiology
/ Mosquitoes
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Outdoor
/ Outdoors
/ Parasitology
/ PCR
/ Plasmodium falciparum
/ Polymerase chain reaction
/ Probability theory
/ Public Health
/ Pyrethrum spray catch
/ Risk factors
/ Seasons
/ Sparsely populated areas
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Vector-borne diseases
2021
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Indoor and outdoor malaria transmission in two ecological settings in rural Mali: implications for vector control
by
Keïta, Moussa
, Krogstad, Donald J.
, Sissoko, Ibrahim
, Diakité, Mahamadou
, Coulibaly, Mamadou B.
, Sogoba, Nafomon
, Doumbia, Seydou O.
, Diawara, Sory Ibrahim
, Sodio, Ambièlè Bernard
, Konaté, Drissa
, Shaffer, Jeffrey G.
, Traoré, Sekou F.
, Touré, Mahamoudou
, Doumbia, Sidy
in
Abdomen
/ An. gambiae complex
/ Aquatic insects
/ Bayesian analysis
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Biting
/ Blood
/ Blood meals
/ Collections
/ Consent
/ Disease transmission
/ DNA
/ ELISA
/ Entomological Inoculation Rate (EIR)
/ Entomology
/ Environmental aspects
/ Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
/ Health aspects
/ Human diseases
/ Human landing catch
/ Identification
/ Indoor environments
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Inoculation
/ Insect bites
/ Insecticides
/ Laboratories
/ Malaria
/ Malaria transmission
/ Microbiology
/ Mosquitoes
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Outdoor
/ Outdoors
/ Parasitology
/ PCR
/ Plasmodium falciparum
/ Polymerase chain reaction
/ Probability theory
/ Public Health
/ Pyrethrum spray catch
/ Risk factors
/ Seasons
/ Sparsely populated areas
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Vector-borne diseases
2021
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Indoor and outdoor malaria transmission in two ecological settings in rural Mali: implications for vector control
by
Keïta, Moussa
, Krogstad, Donald J.
, Sissoko, Ibrahim
, Diakité, Mahamadou
, Coulibaly, Mamadou B.
, Sogoba, Nafomon
, Doumbia, Seydou O.
, Diawara, Sory Ibrahim
, Sodio, Ambièlè Bernard
, Konaté, Drissa
, Shaffer, Jeffrey G.
, Traoré, Sekou F.
, Touré, Mahamoudou
, Doumbia, Sidy
in
Abdomen
/ An. gambiae complex
/ Aquatic insects
/ Bayesian analysis
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Biting
/ Blood
/ Blood meals
/ Collections
/ Consent
/ Disease transmission
/ DNA
/ ELISA
/ Entomological Inoculation Rate (EIR)
/ Entomology
/ Environmental aspects
/ Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
/ Health aspects
/ Human diseases
/ Human landing catch
/ Identification
/ Indoor environments
/ Infectious Diseases
/ Inoculation
/ Insect bites
/ Insecticides
/ Laboratories
/ Malaria
/ Malaria transmission
/ Microbiology
/ Mosquitoes
/ Nucleotide sequence
/ Outdoor
/ Outdoors
/ Parasitology
/ PCR
/ Plasmodium falciparum
/ Polymerase chain reaction
/ Probability theory
/ Public Health
/ Pyrethrum spray catch
/ Risk factors
/ Seasons
/ Sparsely populated areas
/ Tropical Medicine
/ Vector-borne diseases
2021
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Indoor and outdoor malaria transmission in two ecological settings in rural Mali: implications for vector control
Journal Article
Indoor and outdoor malaria transmission in two ecological settings in rural Mali: implications for vector control
2021
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Overview
Background
Implementation and upscale of effective malaria vector control strategies necessitates understanding the multi-factorial aspects of transmission patterns. The primary aims of this study are to determine the vector composition, biting rates, trophic preference, and the overall importance of distinguishing outdoor
versus
indoor malaria transmission through a study at two communities in rural Mali.
Methods
Mosquito collection was carried out between July 2012 and June 2016 at two rural Mali communities (Dangassa and Koïla Bamanan) using pyrethrum spray-catch and human landing catch approaches at both indoor and outdoor locations. Species of
Anopheles gambiae
complex were identified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Enzyme-Linked -Immuno-Sorbent Assay (ELISA) were used to determine the origin of mosquito blood meals and presence of
Plasmodium falciparum
sporozoite infections.
Results
A total of 11,237
An. gambiae
sensu lato (
s.l
.) were collected during the study period (5239 and 5998 from the Dangassa and Koïla Bamanan sites, respectively). Of the 679 identified by PCR in Dangassa,
Anopheles coluzzii
was the predominant species with 91.4% of the catch followed by
An. gambiae
(8.0%) and
Anopheles arabiensis
(0.6%). At the same time in Koïla Bamanan, of the 623
An. gambiae s.l.
,
An. coluzzii
accounted for 99% of the catch,
An. arabiensis
0.8% and
An. gambiae
0.2%. Human Blood Index (HBI) measures were significantly higher in Dangassa (79.4%; 95% Bayesian credible interval (BCI) [77.4, 81.4]) than in Koïla Bamanan (15.9%; 95% BCI [14.7, 17.1]). The human biting rates were higher during the second half of the night at both sites. In Dangassa, the sporozoite rate was comparable between outdoor and indoor mosquito collections. For outdoor collections, the sporozoite positive rate was 3.6% (95% BCI [2.1–4.3]) and indoor collections were 3.1% (95% BCI [2.4–5.0]). In Koïla Bamanan, the sporozoite rate was higher indoors at 4.3% (95% BCI [2.7–6.3]) compared with outdoors at 2.4% (95% BCI [1.1–4.2]). In Dangassa, corrected entomological inoculation rates (cEIRs) using HBI were 13.74 [95% BCI 9.21–19.14] infective bites/person/month (ib/p/m) at indoor, and 18.66 [95% BCI 12.55–25.81] ib/p/m at outdoor. For Koïla Bamanan, cEIRs were 1.57 [95% BCI 2.34–2.72] ib/p/m and 0.94 [95% BCI 0.43–1.64] ib/p/m for indoor and outdoor, respectively. EIRs were significantly higher at the Dangassa site than the Koïla Bamanan site.
Conclusion
The findings in this work may indicate the occurrence of active, outdoor residual malaria transmission is comparable to indoor transmission in some geographic settings. The high outdoor transmission patterns observed here highlight the need for additional strategies to combat outdoor malaria transmission to complement traditional indoor preventive approaches such as long-lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) and indoor residual spraying (IRS) which typically focus on resting mosquitoes.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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