Vector-borne diseases control using Sterile Insect Technique with accidental releases of sterile females

According to the world health organization, the major vector-borne diseases (VBD) together account for around 17% of the estimated global burden of communicable diseases. Every year, there are nearly 700,000 deaths from VBD. It is important to emphasize that more than 80% of the global population live in areas at risk from at least one major VBD. Despite the progress in knowledge on VBD, for most of them, the major problem is the absence of effective drugs and vaccines. That is why, in the last decades, the development of (sustainable) vector control methods has become one of the most challenging issues to reduce the impact of VBD and, also, limit their spreading. In this talk, we focus on the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) within an epidemiological context [1], with a main focus on Dengue. SIT is a technique to control vectors of diseases by releasing sterile males only. However, sex-separation being a complex process, females can also be sterilized and released. Since only females are vectors, it could be problematic when arthropod viruses are circulating. We develop and study an entomological epidemiological model that includes releases of sterile insects and mechanical control, i.e. the removal of breeding sites. Qualitative analysis of the model highlight a threshold number of treated males above which the control of wild population is always effective, using massive releases. We show that if R0, the basic reproduction number of the epidemiological model without SIT, is above a certain threshold, then, the epidemiological risk can only be controlled using (very) massive SIT releases. Otherwise, when SIT occurs, the SIT-R0, that shapes the stability property of the (periodic) disease-free equilibrium, can be taken below one using non-massive SIT releases. However, practically, it seems more efficient to consider massive releases, followed by small releases [2]. Of utmost importance, our results reveal that outside an epidemic period, the release of sterile females is not an issue, as long as the number of sterile males is above the critical threshold. Within an epidemic period, we show that the releases of sterile females do not really influence the SIT strategy, as long as their proportion (to the total amount of released sterile insects) is quite low, i.e. no more than 5% (IAEA standard requires 2%). Our theoretical results will be illustrated with an example based on an ongoing SIT project in Reunion Island (France), where Dengue is circulating [1].

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yatat Djeumen, Ivric Valaire, Dumont, Yves
Format: conference_item biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: University of Pretoria
Online Access:http://agritrop.cirad.fr/598629/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/598629/1/Yatat_Dumont_Biomath_2021_depot.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cirad-fr-598629
record_format koha
spelling dig-cirad-fr-5986292021-08-03T09:49:33Z http://agritrop.cirad.fr/598629/ http://agritrop.cirad.fr/598629/ Vector-borne diseases control using Sterile Insect Technique with accidental releases of sterile females. Yatat Djeumen Ivric Valaire, Dumont Yves. 2021. . University of Pretoria. Pretoria : University of Pretoria, Résumé, p. 16. Biomath 2021: International Conference on Mathematical Methods and Models in Biosciences, Pretoria, Afrique du Sud, 20 Juin 2021/25 Juin 2021.https://www.up.ac.za/cf-biomath2021/conference/abstracts/all <https://www.up.ac.za/cf-biomath2021/conference/abstracts/all> Researchers Vector-borne diseases control using Sterile Insect Technique with accidental releases of sterile females Yatat Djeumen, Ivric Valaire Dumont, Yves eng 2021 University of Pretoria According to the world health organization, the major vector-borne diseases (VBD) together account for around 17% of the estimated global burden of communicable diseases. Every year, there are nearly 700,000 deaths from VBD. It is important to emphasize that more than 80% of the global population live in areas at risk from at least one major VBD. Despite the progress in knowledge on VBD, for most of them, the major problem is the absence of effective drugs and vaccines. That is why, in the last decades, the development of (sustainable) vector control methods has become one of the most challenging issues to reduce the impact of VBD and, also, limit their spreading. In this talk, we focus on the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) within an epidemiological context [1], with a main focus on Dengue. SIT is a technique to control vectors of diseases by releasing sterile males only. However, sex-separation being a complex process, females can also be sterilized and released. Since only females are vectors, it could be problematic when arthropod viruses are circulating. We develop and study an entomological epidemiological model that includes releases of sterile insects and mechanical control, i.e. the removal of breeding sites. Qualitative analysis of the model highlight a threshold number of treated males above which the control of wild population is always effective, using massive releases. We show that if R0, the basic reproduction number of the epidemiological model without SIT, is above a certain threshold, then, the epidemiological risk can only be controlled using (very) massive SIT releases. Otherwise, when SIT occurs, the SIT-R0, that shapes the stability property of the (periodic) disease-free equilibrium, can be taken below one using non-massive SIT releases. However, practically, it seems more efficient to consider massive releases, followed by small releases [2]. Of utmost importance, our results reveal that outside an epidemic period, the release of sterile females is not an issue, as long as the number of sterile males is above the critical threshold. Within an epidemic period, we show that the releases of sterile females do not really influence the SIT strategy, as long as their proportion (to the total amount of released sterile insects) is quite low, i.e. no more than 5% (IAEA standard requires 2%). Our theoretical results will be illustrated with an example based on an ongoing SIT project in Reunion Island (France), where Dengue is circulating [1]. conference_item info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion http://agritrop.cirad.fr/598629/1/Yatat_Dumont_Biomath_2021_depot.pdf text Cirad license info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess https://agritrop.cirad.fr/mention_legale.html https://www.up.ac.za/cf-biomath2021/conference/abstracts/all info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/purl/https://www.up.ac.za/cf-biomath2021/conference/abstracts/all
institution CIRAD FR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cirad-fr
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CIRAD Francia
language eng
description According to the world health organization, the major vector-borne diseases (VBD) together account for around 17% of the estimated global burden of communicable diseases. Every year, there are nearly 700,000 deaths from VBD. It is important to emphasize that more than 80% of the global population live in areas at risk from at least one major VBD. Despite the progress in knowledge on VBD, for most of them, the major problem is the absence of effective drugs and vaccines. That is why, in the last decades, the development of (sustainable) vector control methods has become one of the most challenging issues to reduce the impact of VBD and, also, limit their spreading. In this talk, we focus on the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) within an epidemiological context [1], with a main focus on Dengue. SIT is a technique to control vectors of diseases by releasing sterile males only. However, sex-separation being a complex process, females can also be sterilized and released. Since only females are vectors, it could be problematic when arthropod viruses are circulating. We develop and study an entomological epidemiological model that includes releases of sterile insects and mechanical control, i.e. the removal of breeding sites. Qualitative analysis of the model highlight a threshold number of treated males above which the control of wild population is always effective, using massive releases. We show that if R0, the basic reproduction number of the epidemiological model without SIT, is above a certain threshold, then, the epidemiological risk can only be controlled using (very) massive SIT releases. Otherwise, when SIT occurs, the SIT-R0, that shapes the stability property of the (periodic) disease-free equilibrium, can be taken below one using non-massive SIT releases. However, practically, it seems more efficient to consider massive releases, followed by small releases [2]. Of utmost importance, our results reveal that outside an epidemic period, the release of sterile females is not an issue, as long as the number of sterile males is above the critical threshold. Within an epidemic period, we show that the releases of sterile females do not really influence the SIT strategy, as long as their proportion (to the total amount of released sterile insects) is quite low, i.e. no more than 5% (IAEA standard requires 2%). Our theoretical results will be illustrated with an example based on an ongoing SIT project in Reunion Island (France), where Dengue is circulating [1].
format conference_item
author Yatat Djeumen, Ivric Valaire
Dumont, Yves
spellingShingle Yatat Djeumen, Ivric Valaire
Dumont, Yves
Vector-borne diseases control using Sterile Insect Technique with accidental releases of sterile females
author_facet Yatat Djeumen, Ivric Valaire
Dumont, Yves
author_sort Yatat Djeumen, Ivric Valaire
title Vector-borne diseases control using Sterile Insect Technique with accidental releases of sterile females
title_short Vector-borne diseases control using Sterile Insect Technique with accidental releases of sterile females
title_full Vector-borne diseases control using Sterile Insect Technique with accidental releases of sterile females
title_fullStr Vector-borne diseases control using Sterile Insect Technique with accidental releases of sterile females
title_full_unstemmed Vector-borne diseases control using Sterile Insect Technique with accidental releases of sterile females
title_sort vector-borne diseases control using sterile insect technique with accidental releases of sterile females
publisher University of Pretoria
url http://agritrop.cirad.fr/598629/
http://agritrop.cirad.fr/598629/1/Yatat_Dumont_Biomath_2021_depot.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT yatatdjeumenivricvalaire vectorbornediseasescontrolusingsterileinsecttechniquewithaccidentalreleasesofsterilefemales
AT dumontyves vectorbornediseasescontrolusingsterileinsecttechniquewithaccidentalreleasesofsterilefemales
_version_ 1758026847703007232