Efficacy of Wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in Singapore

Background: Due to the absence of available therapeutics and good vaccines, vector control solutions are needed to mitigate the spread of dengue. Matings between male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes infected with the wAlbB strain of Wolbachia and wildtype females yield non-viable eggs. We evaluated the eff...

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Main Authors: Lim, Jue Tao, Bansal, Somya, Chong, Chee Seng, Dickens, Borame, Ng, Youming, Deng, Lu, Lee, Caleb, Tan, Li Yun, Chain, Grace, Ma, Pei, Sim, Shuzhen, Tan, Cheong Huat, Cook, Alex R., Ng, Lee Ching
Other Authors: Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178612
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1786122024-07-07T15:37:36Z Efficacy of Wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in Singapore Lim, Jue Tao Bansal, Somya Chong, Chee Seng Dickens, Borame Ng, Youming Deng, Lu Lee, Caleb Tan, Li Yun Chain, Grace Ma, Pei Sim, Shuzhen Tan, Cheong Huat Cook, Alex R. Ng, Lee Ching Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) School of Biological Sciences National Environment Agency Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Wolbachia Dengue Background: Due to the absence of available therapeutics and good vaccines, vector control solutions are needed to mitigate the spread of dengue. Matings between male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes infected with the wAlbB strain of Wolbachia and wildtype females yield non-viable eggs. We evaluated the efficacy of releasing wAlbB-infected A aegypti male mosquitoes to suppress dengue incidence. Methods: In this synthetic control study, we conducted large-scale field trials in Singapore involving release of wAlbB-infected A aegypti male mosquitoes for dengue control via vector population suppression, from epidemiological week (EW) 27, 2018, to EW 26, 2022. We selected two large towns (Yishun and Tampines) to adopt an expanding release strategy and two smaller towns (Bukit Batok and Choa Chu Kang) to adopt a targeted-release approach. Releases were conducted two times a week in high-rise public housing estates. All intervention and control locations practised the same baseline dengue control protocol. The main outcome was weekly dengue incidence rate caused by any dengue virus serotype. We used incidence data collected by the Singapore Ministry of Health to assess the efficacy of the interventions. To compare interventions, we used the synthetic control method to generate appropriate counterfactuals for the intervention towns using a weighted combination of 30 control towns between EW 1, 2014 and EW 26, 2022. Findings: Our study comprised an at-risk population of 607 872 individuals living in intervention sites and 3 894 544 individuals living in control sites. Interventions demonstrated up to 77·28% (121/156, 95% CI 75·81–78·58) intervention efficacy despite incomplete coverage across all towns until EW 26, 2022. Intervention efficacies increased as release coverage increased across all intervention sites. Releases led to 2242 (95% CI 2092–2391) fewer cases per 100 000 people in intervention sites during the study period. Secondary analysis showed that these intervention effects were replicated across all age groups and both sexes for intervention sites. Interpretation: Our results demonstrated the potential of Wolbachia-mediated incompatible insect technique for strengthening dengue control in tropical cities, where dengue burden is the greatest. Ministry of Education (MOE) Ministry of Finance National Environmental Agency (NEA) Published version The Wolbachia programme was funded by the Singapore Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Sustainability, and the National Environment Agency, and the Singapore National Robotics Program. JTL was supported by the Singapore Ministry of Education Start-up Grant. SB and ARC were supported by a Singapore Ministry of Education Tier 2 grant. 2024-07-01T02:44:43Z 2024-07-01T02:44:43Z 2024 Journal Article Lim, J. T., Bansal, S., Chong, C. S., Dickens, B., Ng, Y., Deng, L., Lee, C., Tan, L. Y., Chain, G., Ma, P., Sim, S., Tan, C. H., Cook, A. R. & Ng, L. C. (2024). Efficacy of Wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in Singapore. The Lancet. Microbe, 5(5), e422-e432. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2666-5247(23)00397-X 2666-5247 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178612 10.1016/S2666-5247(23)00397-X 38342109 2-s2.0-85184749959 5 5 e422 e432 en MOE-SUG The Lancet. Microbe © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Wolbachia
Dengue
spellingShingle Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
Wolbachia
Dengue
Lim, Jue Tao
Bansal, Somya
Chong, Chee Seng
Dickens, Borame
Ng, Youming
Deng, Lu
Lee, Caleb
Tan, Li Yun
Chain, Grace
Ma, Pei
Sim, Shuzhen
Tan, Cheong Huat
Cook, Alex R.
Ng, Lee Ching
Efficacy of Wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in Singapore
description Background: Due to the absence of available therapeutics and good vaccines, vector control solutions are needed to mitigate the spread of dengue. Matings between male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes infected with the wAlbB strain of Wolbachia and wildtype females yield non-viable eggs. We evaluated the efficacy of releasing wAlbB-infected A aegypti male mosquitoes to suppress dengue incidence. Methods: In this synthetic control study, we conducted large-scale field trials in Singapore involving release of wAlbB-infected A aegypti male mosquitoes for dengue control via vector population suppression, from epidemiological week (EW) 27, 2018, to EW 26, 2022. We selected two large towns (Yishun and Tampines) to adopt an expanding release strategy and two smaller towns (Bukit Batok and Choa Chu Kang) to adopt a targeted-release approach. Releases were conducted two times a week in high-rise public housing estates. All intervention and control locations practised the same baseline dengue control protocol. The main outcome was weekly dengue incidence rate caused by any dengue virus serotype. We used incidence data collected by the Singapore Ministry of Health to assess the efficacy of the interventions. To compare interventions, we used the synthetic control method to generate appropriate counterfactuals for the intervention towns using a weighted combination of 30 control towns between EW 1, 2014 and EW 26, 2022. Findings: Our study comprised an at-risk population of 607 872 individuals living in intervention sites and 3 894 544 individuals living in control sites. Interventions demonstrated up to 77·28% (121/156, 95% CI 75·81–78·58) intervention efficacy despite incomplete coverage across all towns until EW 26, 2022. Intervention efficacies increased as release coverage increased across all intervention sites. Releases led to 2242 (95% CI 2092–2391) fewer cases per 100 000 people in intervention sites during the study period. Secondary analysis showed that these intervention effects were replicated across all age groups and both sexes for intervention sites. Interpretation: Our results demonstrated the potential of Wolbachia-mediated incompatible insect technique for strengthening dengue control in tropical cities, where dengue burden is the greatest.
author2 Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
author_facet Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine)
Lim, Jue Tao
Bansal, Somya
Chong, Chee Seng
Dickens, Borame
Ng, Youming
Deng, Lu
Lee, Caleb
Tan, Li Yun
Chain, Grace
Ma, Pei
Sim, Shuzhen
Tan, Cheong Huat
Cook, Alex R.
Ng, Lee Ching
format Article
author Lim, Jue Tao
Bansal, Somya
Chong, Chee Seng
Dickens, Borame
Ng, Youming
Deng, Lu
Lee, Caleb
Tan, Li Yun
Chain, Grace
Ma, Pei
Sim, Shuzhen
Tan, Cheong Huat
Cook, Alex R.
Ng, Lee Ching
author_sort Lim, Jue Tao
title Efficacy of Wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in Singapore
title_short Efficacy of Wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in Singapore
title_full Efficacy of Wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in Singapore
title_fullStr Efficacy of Wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Efficacy of Wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in Singapore
title_sort efficacy of wolbachia-mediated sterility to reduce the incidence of dengue: a synthetic control study in singapore
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178612
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