Malaria burden and residual transmission: two thirds of mosquito bites may not be preventable with current vector control tools on Bioko Island, Equatorial Guinea

•Indoor biting contributes more to the malaria burden than outdoor biting in Bioko.•Malaria infection was associated with more bites, not whether indoors or outdoors.•Older age, male, not using a net, living in rural areas, and going indoors later increased risk of mosquito bites.•The proportion of...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of infectious diseases 2024-10, Vol.147, p.107197, Article 107197
Hauptverfasser: Ooko, Michael, Bela, Nestor Rivas, Leonard, Mathias, Maye, Valeriano Oluy Nsue, Efiri, Prudencio Bibang Engono, Ekoko, Wolfgang, Rivas, Matilde Riloha, Galick, David S, DeBoer, Kylie R, Donfack, Olivier Tresor, Guerra, Carlos A, García, Guillermo A, Kleinschmidt, Immo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Indoor biting contributes more to the malaria burden than outdoor biting in Bioko.•Malaria infection was associated with more bites, not whether indoors or outdoors.•Older age, male, not using a net, living in rural areas, and going indoors later increased risk of mosquito bites.•The proportion of mosquito bites not averted by using a net was estimated at 66%.•Novel vector control tools are urgently needed to protect against residual biting. This study assesses exposure to malaria vector mosquitos that is nonpreventable through use of nets, the contribution of outdoor and indoor biting towards residual vector exposure, and the risk factors for being bitten and for being infected with malaria parasites on Bioko Island, Equatorial Guinea. Human behavior and malaria infection data were collected from 13,735 randomly selected residents during cross-sectional surveys, concomitantly with entomological human landing catches, indoors and outdoors, in 20 locations on the Island. Self-reported time of going indoors, going to bed and whether using a net were analyzed to impute for each respondent the number of bites received outdoors and indoors during the night before the survey. On average, each person received 2.7 (95% CI: 2.6-2.8) bites per night outdoors, 8.5 (8.3 to 8.7) bites indoors if not using a net, and 4.7 (4.5 to 4.8) bites indoors if using a net. Malaria infection was associated with more bites, regardless of whether received indoors or outdoors. Older age, male gender, not using a net, rural location, and going indoors later increased the risk of being bitten. The proportion of bites not averted by using a net was estimated as 66% (61 to 71). A large proportion of biting, mostly indoors, may not be preventable by bednets. Tools targeting indoor biting should be prioritized in Bioko. Novel vector control tools are urgently needed to reduce overall exposure to mosquito bites.
ISSN:1201-9712
1878-3511
1878-3511
DOI:10.1016/j.ijid.2024.107197