The impact of indoor residual spraying on Plasmodium falciparum microsatellite variation in an area of high seasonal malaria transmission in Ghana, West Africa
Date
2021
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Abstract
Here, we report the first population genetic study to examine the impact of indoor
residual spraying (IRS) on Plasmodium falciparum in humans. This study was conducted
in an area of high seasonal malaria transmission in Bongo District, Ghana. IRS was
implemented during the dry season (November–May) in three consecutive years be tween 2013 and 2015 to reduce transmission and attempt to bottleneck the parasite
population in humans towards lower diversity with greater linkage disequilibrium.
The study was done against a background of widespread use of long-lasting insec ticidal nets, typical for contemporary malaria control in West Africa. Microsatellite
genotyping with 10 loci was used to construct 392 P. falciparum multilocus infection
haplotypes collected from two age-stratified cross-sectional surveys at the end of
the wet seasons pre- and post-IRS. Three-rounds of IRS, under operational condi tions, led to a >90% reduction in transmission intensity and a 35.7% reduction in
the P. falciparum prevalence (p < .001). Despite these declines, population genetic analysis of the infection haplotypes revealed no dramatic changes with only a slight,
but significant increase in genetic diversity (He: pre-IRS = 0.79 vs. post-IRS = 0.81,
p = .048). Reduced relatedness of the parasite population (p < .001) was observed
post-IRS, probably due to decreased opportunities for outcrossing. Spatiotemporal
genetic differentiation between the pre- and post-IRS surveys (D = 0.0329 [95% CI:
0.0209 – 0.0473], p = .034) was identified. These data provide a genetic explanation
for the resilience of P. falciparum to short-term IRS programmes in high-transmission
settings in sub-Saharan Africa.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
genetic epidemiology, indoor residual spraying, malaria elimination, microsatellite genotyping, neutral genetic variation, Plasmodium falciparum