Incidence of malaria among mosquito collectors conducting human landing catches in western Kenya

John E Gimnig, Edward D Walker, Peter Otieno, Jackline Kosgei, George Olang, Maurice Ombok, John Williamson, Doris Marwanga, Daisy Abong'o, Meghna Desai, Simon Kariuki, Mary J Hamel, Neil F Lobo, John Vulule, M Nabie Bayoh, John E Gimnig, Edward D Walker, Peter Otieno, Jackline Kosgei, George Olang, Maurice Ombok, John Williamson, Doris Marwanga, Daisy Abong'o, Meghna Desai, Simon Kariuki, Mary J Hamel, Neil F Lobo, John Vulule, M Nabie Bayoh

Abstract

The human landing catch (HLC) has long been the gold standard for estimating malaria transmission by mosquitoes, but has come under scrutiny because of ethical concerns of exposing collectors to infectious bites. We estimated the incidence of Plasmodium falciparum malaria infection in a cohort of 152 persons conducting HLCs and compared it with that of 147 non-collectors in western Kenya. Participants were presumptively cleared of malaria with Coartem™ (artemether-lumefantrine) and tested for malaria every 2 weeks for 12 weeks. The HLC collections were conducted four nights per week for six weeks. Collectors were provided chemoprophylaxis with Malarone™ (atovaquone-proguanil) during the six weeks of HLC activities and one week after HLC activities were completed. The incidence of malaria was 96.6% lower in collectors than in non-collectors (hazard ratio = 0.034, P < 0.0001). Therefore, with proper prophylaxis, concern about increased risk of malaria among collectors should not be an impediment to conducting HLC studies.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showing time to first infection for collectors and non-collectors, western Kenya. The start of human landing catches, the end of human landing catches, and the end of prophylaxis for the collectors are indicated by vertical lines. The collectors began prophylaxis one day before the start of catches.

Source: PubMed

3
Subscribe