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Evaluating trends in damage to attractive targeted sugar baits (ATSBs) deployed during the second year of a two-year Phase III trial in Western Zambia

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Evaluating trends in damage to attractive targeted sugar baits (ATSBs) deployed during the second year of a two-year Phase III trial in Western Zambia. / Kyomuhangi, Irene; Yukich, Joshua; Saili, Kochelani et al.
In: Malaria Journal, Vol. 23, No. 1, 263, 29.08.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kyomuhangi, I, Yukich, J, Saili, K, Orange, E, Masuzyo, MH, Mwenya, M, Mambo, P, Hamainza, B, Wagman, J, Miller, J, Chanda, J, Silumbe, K, Littrell, M, Eisele, TP & Ashton, RA 2024, 'Evaluating trends in damage to attractive targeted sugar baits (ATSBs) deployed during the second year of a two-year Phase III trial in Western Zambia', Malaria Journal, vol. 23, no. 1, 263. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05089-5

APA

Kyomuhangi, I., Yukich, J., Saili, K., Orange, E., Masuzyo, M. H., Mwenya, M., Mambo, P., Hamainza, B., Wagman, J., Miller, J., Chanda, J., Silumbe, K., Littrell, M., Eisele, T. P., & Ashton, R. A. (2024). Evaluating trends in damage to attractive targeted sugar baits (ATSBs) deployed during the second year of a two-year Phase III trial in Western Zambia. Malaria Journal, 23(1), Article 263. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12936-024-05089-5

Vancouver

Kyomuhangi I, Yukich J, Saili K, Orange E, Masuzyo MH, Mwenya M et al. Evaluating trends in damage to attractive targeted sugar baits (ATSBs) deployed during the second year of a two-year Phase III trial in Western Zambia. Malaria Journal. 2024 Aug 29;23(1):263. doi: 10.1186/s12936-024-05089-5

Author

Bibtex

@article{866907f1c2444d8e99e5a17a41b33532,
title = "Evaluating trends in damage to attractive targeted sugar baits (ATSBs) deployed during the second year of a two-year Phase III trial in Western Zambia",
abstract = "Background: Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits (ATSBs) are a proposed new vector control tool for malaria that contain sugar and an ingestion toxicant, and are designed to attract and kill sugar-feeding mosquitoes. During a two-arm cluster randomized Phase III trial conducted in Zambia to test the efficacy of ATSB stations on malaria incidence, ATSB stations deployed on eligible household structures within intervention clusters were routinely monitored to ensure their good physical condition and high coverage. This study investigates trends in prevalence and rate of damage to ATSB stations during year 2 of the two-year trial. Methods: The analysis was conducted using monitoring data collected in year 2, which included types of damage observed, location, and date of removal and/or replacement of ATSB stations. The study evaluated temporal trends in the prevalence of overall damage and different damage types among 68,299 ATSB stations deployed. A profile of all ATSB stations installed on each structure was constructed, and spatial analyses conducted on overall damage and different damage types observed on 18,890 structures. Mixed effects regression analyses were conducted to investigate drivers of damage to ATSB stations on these structures. Results: Prevalence of overall damage and different damage types was temporally and spatially heterogeneous. Among damaged ATSB stations observed during monitoring, tears and mold had the highest prevalences on average, with tears maintaining above 50.0% prevalence through most of the monitoring period, while mold prevalence increased steadily during the first few months, peaking in February. Overall, 45.6% of structures had at least one damaged ATSB station, however this varied spatially across the trial site. Both structure characteristics and environmental factors significantly impacted the odds and rate of damage to ATSB stations on structures, including: ATSB stations{\textquoteright} level of protection from rainfall and sunshine; roof and wall material of the structure; night-time temperature; rainfall; enhanced vegetation index, and land cover. Conclusion: Damage to ATSB stations in this setting was common and was temporally and spatially heterogeneous. This has implications on operational feasibility, sustainability, and cost of future deployment. Further research is required to understand the mechanisms of damage, and to minimize prevalence and rate of damage to ATSB stations.",
keywords = "Attractive targeted sugar bait, Malaria, Vector control",
author = "Irene Kyomuhangi and Joshua Yukich and Kochelani Saili and Erica Orange and Masuzyo, {Mundia H.} and Mwansa Mwenya and Patricia Mambo and Busiku Hamainza and Joe Wagman and John Miller and Javan Chanda and Kafula Silumbe and Megan Littrell and Eisele, {Thomas P.} and Ashton, {Ruth A.}",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
day = "29",
doi = "10.1186/s12936-024-05089-5",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
journal = "Malaria Journal",
issn = "1475-2875",
publisher = "BioMed Central",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Evaluating trends in damage to attractive targeted sugar baits (ATSBs) deployed during the second year of a two-year Phase III trial in Western Zambia

AU - Kyomuhangi, Irene

AU - Yukich, Joshua

AU - Saili, Kochelani

AU - Orange, Erica

AU - Masuzyo, Mundia H.

AU - Mwenya, Mwansa

AU - Mambo, Patricia

AU - Hamainza, Busiku

AU - Wagman, Joe

AU - Miller, John

AU - Chanda, Javan

AU - Silumbe, Kafula

AU - Littrell, Megan

AU - Eisele, Thomas P.

AU - Ashton, Ruth A.

PY - 2024/8/29

Y1 - 2024/8/29

N2 - Background: Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits (ATSBs) are a proposed new vector control tool for malaria that contain sugar and an ingestion toxicant, and are designed to attract and kill sugar-feeding mosquitoes. During a two-arm cluster randomized Phase III trial conducted in Zambia to test the efficacy of ATSB stations on malaria incidence, ATSB stations deployed on eligible household structures within intervention clusters were routinely monitored to ensure their good physical condition and high coverage. This study investigates trends in prevalence and rate of damage to ATSB stations during year 2 of the two-year trial. Methods: The analysis was conducted using monitoring data collected in year 2, which included types of damage observed, location, and date of removal and/or replacement of ATSB stations. The study evaluated temporal trends in the prevalence of overall damage and different damage types among 68,299 ATSB stations deployed. A profile of all ATSB stations installed on each structure was constructed, and spatial analyses conducted on overall damage and different damage types observed on 18,890 structures. Mixed effects regression analyses were conducted to investigate drivers of damage to ATSB stations on these structures. Results: Prevalence of overall damage and different damage types was temporally and spatially heterogeneous. Among damaged ATSB stations observed during monitoring, tears and mold had the highest prevalences on average, with tears maintaining above 50.0% prevalence through most of the monitoring period, while mold prevalence increased steadily during the first few months, peaking in February. Overall, 45.6% of structures had at least one damaged ATSB station, however this varied spatially across the trial site. Both structure characteristics and environmental factors significantly impacted the odds and rate of damage to ATSB stations on structures, including: ATSB stations’ level of protection from rainfall and sunshine; roof and wall material of the structure; night-time temperature; rainfall; enhanced vegetation index, and land cover. Conclusion: Damage to ATSB stations in this setting was common and was temporally and spatially heterogeneous. This has implications on operational feasibility, sustainability, and cost of future deployment. Further research is required to understand the mechanisms of damage, and to minimize prevalence and rate of damage to ATSB stations.

AB - Background: Attractive Targeted Sugar Baits (ATSBs) are a proposed new vector control tool for malaria that contain sugar and an ingestion toxicant, and are designed to attract and kill sugar-feeding mosquitoes. During a two-arm cluster randomized Phase III trial conducted in Zambia to test the efficacy of ATSB stations on malaria incidence, ATSB stations deployed on eligible household structures within intervention clusters were routinely monitored to ensure their good physical condition and high coverage. This study investigates trends in prevalence and rate of damage to ATSB stations during year 2 of the two-year trial. Methods: The analysis was conducted using monitoring data collected in year 2, which included types of damage observed, location, and date of removal and/or replacement of ATSB stations. The study evaluated temporal trends in the prevalence of overall damage and different damage types among 68,299 ATSB stations deployed. A profile of all ATSB stations installed on each structure was constructed, and spatial analyses conducted on overall damage and different damage types observed on 18,890 structures. Mixed effects regression analyses were conducted to investigate drivers of damage to ATSB stations on these structures. Results: Prevalence of overall damage and different damage types was temporally and spatially heterogeneous. Among damaged ATSB stations observed during monitoring, tears and mold had the highest prevalences on average, with tears maintaining above 50.0% prevalence through most of the monitoring period, while mold prevalence increased steadily during the first few months, peaking in February. Overall, 45.6% of structures had at least one damaged ATSB station, however this varied spatially across the trial site. Both structure characteristics and environmental factors significantly impacted the odds and rate of damage to ATSB stations on structures, including: ATSB stations’ level of protection from rainfall and sunshine; roof and wall material of the structure; night-time temperature; rainfall; enhanced vegetation index, and land cover. Conclusion: Damage to ATSB stations in this setting was common and was temporally and spatially heterogeneous. This has implications on operational feasibility, sustainability, and cost of future deployment. Further research is required to understand the mechanisms of damage, and to minimize prevalence and rate of damage to ATSB stations.

KW - Attractive targeted sugar bait

KW - Malaria

KW - Vector control

U2 - 10.1186/s12936-024-05089-5

DO - 10.1186/s12936-024-05089-5

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

JO - Malaria Journal

JF - Malaria Journal

SN - 1475-2875

IS - 1

M1 - 263

ER -