The TIRS trial: protocol for a cluster randomized controlled trial assessing the efficacy of preventive targeted indoor residual spraying to reduce Aedes-borne viral illnesses in Merida, Mexico

TIRS 试验:一项集群随机对照试验方案,评估预防性针对性室内滞留喷洒对减少墨西哥梅里达伊蚊传播病毒性疾病的效果

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作者:Pablo Manrique-Saide, Natalie E Dean, M Elizabeth Halloran, Ira M Longini, Matthew H Collins, Lance A Waller, Hector Gomez-Dantes, Audrey Lenhart, Thomas J Hladish, Azael Che-Mendoza, Oscar D Kirstein, Yamila Romer, Fabian Correa-Morales, Jorge Palacio-Vargas, Rosa Mendez-Vales, Pilar Granja Pérez, 

Background

Current urban vector control strategies have failed to contain dengue epidemics and to prevent the global expansion of Aedes-borne viruses (ABVs: dengue, chikungunya, Zika). Part of the challenge in sustaining effective ABV control emerges from the paucity of evidence regarding the epidemiological impact of any Aedes control method. A strategy for which there is limited epidemiological evidence is targeted indoor residual spraying (TIRS). TIRS is a modification of classic malaria indoor residual spraying that accounts for Aedes aegypti resting behavior by applying residual insecticides on exposed lower sections of walls (< 1.5 m), under furniture, and on dark surfaces.

Discussion

The findings from this study will provide robust epidemiological evidence of the efficacy of TIRS in reducing ABV illness and infection. If efficacious, TIRS could drive a paradigm shift in Aedes control by considering Ae. aegypti behavior to guide residual insecticide applications and changing deployment to preemptive control (rather than in response to symptomatic cases), two major enhancements to existing practice.

Trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04343521 . Registered on 13 April 2020. The protocol also complies with the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP) (Additional file 1). Primary sponsor: National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIH/NIAID).

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