Estimating malaria transmission risk through surveillance of human–vector interactions in northern Ghana
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Parasites & Vectors
Abstract
Background Vector bionomics are important aspects of vector-borne disease control programs. Mosquito-biting risks
are affected by environmental, mosquito behavior and human factors, which are important for assessing exposure risk
and intervention impacts. This study estimated malaria transmission risk based on vector–human interactions in north‑
ern Ghana, where indoor residual spraying (IRS) and insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) have been deployed.
Methods Indoor and outdoor human biting rates (HBRs) were measured using monthly human landing catches
(HLCs) from June 2017 to April 2019. Mosquitoes collected were identified to species level, and Anopheles gambiae
sensu lato (An. gambiae s.l.) samples were examined for parity and infectivity. The HBRs were adjusted using mosquito
parity and human behavioral observations.
Results Anopheles gambiae was the main vector species in the IRS (81%) and control (83%) communities. Indoor
and outdoor HBRs were similar in both the IRS intervention (10.6 vs. 11.3 bites per person per night [b/p/n];
z = −0.33, P=0.745) and control communities (18.8 vs. 16.4 b/p/n; z = 1.57, P=0.115). The mean proportion of parous
An. gambiae s.l. was lower in IRS communities (44.6%) than in control communities (71.7%). After adjusting for human
behavior observations and parity, the combined effect of IRS and ITN utilization (IRS: 37.8%; control: 57.3%) on reducing malaria transmission risk was 58% in IRS + ITN communities and 27% in control communities with ITNs alone (z
= −4.07, P<0.001). However, this also revealed that about 41% and 31% of outdoor adjusted bites in IRS and control
communities respectively, occurred before bed time (10:00 pm). The mean directly measured annual entomologic
inoculation rates (EIRs) during the study were 6.1 infective bites per person per year (ib/p/yr) for IRS communities and
16.3 ib/p/yr for control communities. After considering vector survival and observed human behavior, the estimated
EIR for IRS communities was 1.8 ib/p/yr, which represents about a 70% overestimation of risk compared to the directly
measured EIR; for control communities, it was 13.6 ib/p/yr (16% overestimation).
Conclusion Indoor residual spraying significantly impacted entomological indicators of malaria transmission. The
results of this study indicate that vector bionomics alone do not provide an accurate assessment of malaria transmission exposure risk. By accounting for human behavior parameters, we found that high coverage of ITNs alone had less
impact on malaria transmission indices than combining ITNs with IRS, likely due to observed low net use. Reinforcing
effective communication for behavioral change in net use and IRS could further reduce malaria transmission.
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Research Article