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Impact of IRS: Four-years of entomological surveillance of the Indian Visceral Leishmaniases elimination programme
Authors:Rinki Deb  Rudra Pratap Singh  Prabhas Kumar Mishra  Lisa Hitchins  Emma Reid  Arti Manorama Barwa  Debanjan Patra  Chandrima Das  Indranil Sukla  Ashish Kumar Srivastava  Shilpa Raj  Swikruti Mishra  Madhuri Swain  Swapna Mondal  Udita Mandal  Geraldine M Foster  Anna Trett  Gala Garrod  Laura McKenzie  Asgar Ali  Karthick Morchan  Indrajit Chaudhuri  Nupur Roy  Naresh K Gill  Chandramani Singh  Neeraj Agarwal  Sadhana Sharma  Michelle C Stanton  Janet Hemingway  Sridhar Srikantiah  Michael Coleman
Institution:1. Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, United Kingdom ; 2. CARE India, Patna, India ; 3. National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme, Directorate General of Health Services, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Delhi, India ; 4. All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Patna, India ; University of Heidelberg, GERMANY
Abstract:BackgroundIn 2005, Bangladesh, India and Nepal agreed to eliminate visceral leishmaniasis (VL) as a public health problem. The approach to this was through improved case detection and treatment, and controlling transmission by the sand fly vector Phlebotomus argentipes, with indoor residual spraying (IRS) of insecticide. Initially, India applied DDT with stirrup pumps for IRS, however, this did not reduce transmission. After 2015 onwards, the pyrethroid alpha-cypermethrin was applied with compression pumps, and entomological surveillance was initiated in 2016.MethodsEight sentinel sites were established in the Indian states of Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal. IRS coverage was monitored by household survey, quality of insecticide application was measured by HPLC, presence and abundance of the VL vector was monitored by CDC light traps, insecticide resistance was measured with WHO diagnostic assays and case incidence was determined from the VL case register KAMIS.ResultsComplete treatment of houses with IRS increased across all sites from 57% in 2016 to 70% of houses in 2019, rising to >80% if partial house IRS coverage is included (except West Bengal). The quality of insecticide application has improved compared to previous studies, average doses of insecticide on filters papers ranged from 1.52 times the target dose of 25mg/m2 alpha-cypermethrin in 2019 to 1.67 times in 2018. Resistance to DDT has continued to increase, but the vector was not resistant to carbamates, organophosphates or pyrethroids. The annual and seasonal abundance of P. argentipes declined between 2016 to 2019 with an overall infection rate of 0.03%. This was associated with a decline in VL incidence for the blocks represented by the sentinel sites from 1.16 per 10,000 population in 2016 to 0.51 per 10,000 in 2019.ConclusionThrough effective case detection and management reducing the infection reservoirs for P. argentipes in the human population combined with IRS keeping P. argentipes abundance and infectivity low has reduced VL transmission. This combination of effective case management and vector control has now brought India within reach of the VL elimination targets.
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