Next-generation vector control for malaria: product profiling to implementation

Lead Research Organisation: Imperial College London
Department Name: School of Public Health

Abstract

Malaria is a parasitic infection passed between people by infectious mosquito bites that kills about half a million people annually. Mosquito control interventions are therefore crucial and have proven impact. Mass-distributed insecticide-treated bed nets (ITNs) are predicted to have averted > 450 million clinical cases of malaria globally from 2000 to 2015. Mosquitoes have evolved to survive exposure to a key insecticide that is used on nets. This means the protection afforded by ITNs is diminished. ITNs and the spraying of insecticides on the walls of peoples' homes are designed to kill and deter mosquitoes from indoor environments. Mosquitoes can also bite outdoors, and outdoor biting, that leads to malaria transmission, is estimated to cause > 10 million malaria cases annually in Africa, even were indoor control optimised.
'Zero by 40' is a response to this crisis that has generated industrial buy-in from the world's leading agrichemical companies. Zero by 40 aims to eradicate malaria by uniting these companies so that they can re-purpose or develop new mosquito control tools for both indoor and outdoor protection. These tools must be appropriately assessed to understand their protective benefit. Impact will be distinct in different locations. This is because both mosquitoes and people have distinct local behaviours that change how often people receive infectious bites. New experimental methods are needed to make sure we can understand the full potential of new tools. For example, indoor mosquito control interventions may have less impact if people spend more time outdoors where the intervention cannot prevent bites. The best approach to test new mosquito control tools is to use large-scale field trials. These trials compare clinical cases of malaria over time between communities with or without the intervention. But the expense of such trials, and the length of time needed for following cases (usually 2 to 3 years), is a major challenge. Mathematical models, that can recreate the underlying mechanisms that enable malaria to pass between people and mosquitoes, can be used to predict how new interventions might perform. These models can be defined to represent local communities and mosquito populations, so may capture local differences in impact. The predictions from mathematical models can be compared to observations from field trials to confirm predictions are valid. I will use the model to make predictions on where new tools for mosquito control are likely to perform best. The outcomes can ensure integrated vector control management and delay development of future resistance. This work will be crucial to support agrichemical companies making investment decisions.
I will work closely with field scientists in Burkina Faso to collate data on how mosquitoes are affected by re-purposed or new tools. These data will help understand the biology so that I can predict public health impacts of new tools using a transmission model. The model predictions will underpin two webtools. The first webtool will provide a platform to industrial partners to explore how imagined interventions might complement those already employed in different countries. Deciding the best settings for different tools, and what makes them affordable to countries trying to control malaria, are crucial questions I can address to enable industries to make robust investment decisions. The second webtool will provide countries making challenging decisions on how to implement interventions within a budget, with a platform to explore different combinations of mosquito control tools so that they can reduce the most cases for the lowest cost. The webtool can support funding requests for additional budget to enable mosquito control within a country. This can maximise our global effort to eliminate by specifying interventions based on local characteristics related to mosquito bites so that interventions maximise public health impact and minimise financial costs.

Planned Impact

We have a unique opportunity to change the global burden of malaria given buy-in from industry via Zero by 40. However, the direction of effort can and must be informed by a strong evidence-base, one which I can lead through the proposed work. The two webtools that I will build can be crucial for the malaria elimination effort. Current decisions on whether to replace standard pyrethroid-only bed nets with next-generation piperonyl-butoxide (PBO) nets are principally based on the susceptibility bioassay test. This test exposes local mosquitoes to pyrethroid insecticides at a standardised dose and observes the percentage that are killed after exposure. However, there are well-documented challenges with the susceptibility bioassay and multiple other factors contribute to the potential protection afforded by nets. Consideration of the use of historic interventions alters the trajectory of the potential impact of new strategies because of underlying differences in malaria endemicity. The local behaviour of mosquitoes is equally crucial because this determines the window of time when interventions targeting specific mosquito behaviours - e.g. mosquitoes' blood-feeding indoors - can be effective. An advantage of the transmission model is that it provides a platform to explore the combined, non-linear interactions between local characteristics in a mechanistic way, building on meta-analyses of key data, and laying out the intuition and assumptions explicitly.

I am uniquely placed to change the global burden of malaria given buy-in from industry via Zero by 40. This proposal directly benefits UK based and international businesses including BASF, Bayer, Sumitomo Chemical, and UK charity, IVCC, through evidence-based guidance to help target investment toward the development of products that will be most cost-effective. An ambitious pathway to eradication has been laid out for malaria that identifies key challenges including potentially reduced political support and the decline in funding associated with country level control efforts once regions move to prevention of imported cases. I can lead efforts to positively influence vector control policy and investment in innovation for UK and International branches of world-leading agrichemical companies which aligns with the UK's commitment to invest to benefit developing nations. The webtools I propose in this FLF can help converge thinking on how new technologies can support the global effort to eliminate malaria.

I will optimise vector control strategy in a cost-effective manner and within the country-specified budget across management zones using a web interface with the flexibility to contextualise malaria-endemic settings in Africa. This alone should save lives and maximise the performance of vector control across the African continent so benefiting the wider public. This will also benefit policy-makers working in malaria-endemic settings, principally National Malaria Control Programs and the World Health Organization (WHO). The development of both webtools will be necessarily iterative, to ensure evidence on product impacts are driven by relevant up-to-date data and to include new products as they develop and gain WHO approval.

Collaborations with the CNRFP in Burkina Faso will be invaluable to understand fundamental mosquito behaviours that influence vector control efficacy at a fine scale. These will benefit the NMCP specifically in Burkina Faso. The data analysis will inform the wider research community focused on mosquito ecology, vector borne disease and malaria transmission through an understanding of transmission risk differences across villages. In summary, this timely proposal can influence vector control policy and investment in innovation so benefiting: i) UK and international branches of global agrichemical companies; ii) policy-makers working internationally and within malaria-endemic countries, and; iii) the wider public.

Publications

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Challenger J (2023) Assessing the variability in experimental hut trials evaluating insecticide-treated nets against malaria vectors in Current Research in Parasitology & Vector-Borne Diseases

 
Description So far, we have considered the additional benefit of mosquito nets that includes both a fast-acting neuro-acting insecticide from the pyrethroid class together with a synergist called piperonyl butoxide (PBO) over mosquito nets with the pyrethroid insecticide only. We collated together many studies testing the effects of these two types of net on mosquitoes. These studies use experimental huts that can contain the treated nets or untreated nets (controls) and are designed so that wild mosquitoes are able to enter to search for a blood meal on a volunteer sleeper under cover of the net. The reason to include the PBO in the nets is that in many regions of the world with endemic malaria parasites, local mosquitoes that transmit the parasite between humans are able to tolerate or overcome the effects of pyrethroid (following the lengthy use of this type of insecticide for both public health and agriculture). These new nets are now being used in earnest to mitigate against any lost protection from the original pyrethroid-only mosquito nets that are a universal intervention to protect people from exposure to infectious mosquito bites in malaria parsite-endemic countries. We have designed a webtool to help decide which nets might be most effective and cost-effective given different ecological, societal or transmission risk settings. We launched the first version of this tool this year.
Exploitation Route The next steps are to:
1. publish a review that is ongoing that validates this process, showing that the analysis can reasonably predict the public health benefits of these nets, and also indoor spraying of insecticides.
2. include a further potential net intervention that combines pyrethroid insecticide and a chlorfenapyr insecticide within this framework, and to consider how larval source management - any process that reduces the breeding sites for mosquito vectors in and around peoples' homes - can complement vector control for malaria parasite control and elimination.

We are in discussions with the WHO and country partners to improve the webtool and to understand what else could help countries best strategise how to use vector control to protect communities. In the next couple of years of the project, we look forward to further collaborations that can use the webtool both for educational purposes and to support tough decisions on the best strategies for cost-effective vector control.
Sectors Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Environment,Healthcare

URL https://mint.dide.ic.ac.uk/
 
Description The webtool is being used to help understand how vector control reduces malaria transmission in different local settings. We are teaming up now with National Malaria Control program partners to work together for the tough decisions around what interventions to use where within restricted budgets.
First Year Of Impact 2021
Sector Education,Healthcare
Impact Types Policy & public services

 
Title The Malaria INtervention Tool 
Description The MINT tool is designed to help National Malaria Control Programs explore cost effective options of deploying current World Health Organisation (WHO) recommended mosquito nets and / or spraying of indoor insecticide for malaria control. In this tool, a project is a collection of regions and a region is defined as a management unit - this could be an administration unit, province or village. For each region defined in the tool, there is a set of outputs summarising the impact and cost effectiveness of intervention packages. The tool is freely available here: https://mint.dide.ic.ac.uk/ and represents version 1 of the outcome for the UKRI award 
Type Of Technology Webtool/Application 
Year Produced 2021 
Impact There has been much interest in the capabilities of the tool and it has formed the basis of some grant applications led by collaborators in African institutions. We are working now to ensure it is developed in ways to best support the needs of decision makers in malara-endemic Africa. The version 1 of the tool was released just before Christmas and the accompanying publication was available online toward the end of January 2022 in The Lancet Planetary Health. 
URL https://mint.dide.ic.ac.uk/
 
Description A fundraiser for an Imperial STEMM charity: talk for 16-year old medical students in China 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact I delivered an online talk to 16 year old chinese students, who are already interested in medicine and want technical talks. This event is part of a fundraiser for an Imperial STEMM charity. The more the charity succeeds, the more it outpaces the grant funding: so the organisers are running education events in China to fund the UK scheme (which covers medicine as part of an interdisciplinary project-based to STEMM).
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Ifakara Health Institute Masterclass 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Dr Sheila Ogoma and Dr Fredros Okumu (Director of the Ifakara Healith Institute, Tanzania) have established a series of Masterclasses on entomological aspects of malaria. In October 2021, Prof Thomas Churcher and I were invited to discuss our work on malaria interventions and provide our opinions on the ongoing work that forms the basis of the UKRI award. It was an opportunity to present version one of the webtool (Malaria INtervention Tool) that is a key outcome of the UKRI award. We received inspiring interest from participants on the call. We have since received calls for opportunity to use to interface in decision making. We are teaming up with the National Malaria Control Program in Burkina Faso and, the tool is cited in recent grant applications to help support independence in modelling in malaria-endemic countries. Next stages include validating the functionality to strategise decisions across regions, and include an additional mosquito net class for exploration of cost-effectiveness and impact.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aI9pixtvFvw