New bed nets that 'ground' mosquitoes could boost malaria fight
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[March 26, 2022]
By Jennifer Rigby
(Reuters) - Bed nets treated with a new
kind of insecticide cut malaria cases in children by almost half in a
large trial in Tanzania, according to a study in The Lancet, raising
hopes of a new weapon in the fight against the age-old killer.
Bed nets have been instrumental to the vast progress the world has made
in recent decades against malaria, with millions of lives saved. But
progress has stalled in the last few years, in part because the
mosquitoes which spread the infection have increasingly developed
resistance to the insecticide used in existing nets.
In 2020, 627,000 people died of malaria, mainly children in sub-Saharan
Africa.
Now, researchers at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
in the UK (LSHTM), the National Institute for Medical Research and
Kilimanjaro Christian Medical University College in Tanzania, and the
University of Ottawa in Canada have shown that a new insecticide -- the
first in 40 years -- is both safe and effective in a real-world
randomized trial.
The nets, treated with chlorfenapyr as well as pyrethroid, the usual
chemical used, reduced malaria prevalence when compared with the
existing nets by 43% in the first year and 37% in the second year of the
trial.
The study involved more than 39,000 households and followed over 4,500
children aged 6 months to 14 years old. The nets, developed by BASF in
Germany and LSHTM, are marginally more expensive than the current nets,
at around $3 per item, but the researchers said the savings in
preventing cases outweighed the initial increased outlay.
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Anopheles mosquitoes are seen in a net placed in a rice field during
a test in the use of drone technology in the fight against malaria
near Zanzibar City, on the island of Zanzibar, Tanzania, October 30,
2019. REUTERS/Baz Ratner
Chlorfenapyr works differently than
pyrethroid, effectively grounding the mosquitoes by causing wing
cramps and making them unable to fly, and therefore bite, spreading
the infection. The chemical was first proposed for use against
malaria 20 years ago, and has been used for pest control since the
1990s.
The World Health Organization has already pre-qualified the use of
the new nets, but the trial, funded by the British government and
the Wellcome Trust, could lead to more widespread recommendations
for their use.
"This is the first evidence in real-life conditions," Dr Jacklin
Mosha, the study's lead author from the National Institute for
Medical Research, Tanzania, told Reuters.
Alongside progress on a malaria vaccine, which was approved by the
World Health Organization last year, the team said the net could be
another tool in the malaria toolbox.
However, they warned that it is important to ensure that mosquitoes
do not also quickly develop resistance to chlorfenapyr, if used
widely.
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby; editing by Michele Gershberg and
Jonathan Oatis)
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