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Targeting malaria parasites inside mosquitoes: ecoevolutionary consequences

Journal

TRENDS IN PARASITOLOGY
Volume 38, Issue 12, Pages 1031-1040

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.pt.2022.09.004

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Funding

  1. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale
  2. Wellcome Trust [202769/Z/16/Z]
  3. Royal Society [URF/R/180020, RGF \EA\181046]
  4. US National Institutes of Health [NIH R01,5R01AI148646-03]
  5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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This article investigates the possibility of using antimalarial drugs designed for human treatment in mosquitoes to interrupt malaria transmission. The study suggests that targeting parasites inside mosquitoes can help minimize the risk of resistance evolution and extend the lifespan and clinical benefit of these drugs.
Proof-of-concept studies demonstrate that antimalarial drugs designed for human treatment can also be applied to mosquitoes to interrupt malaria transmission. Deploying a new control tool is ideally undertaken within a stewardship programme that maximises a drug's lifespan by minimising the risk of resistance evolution and slowing its spread once emerged. We ask: what are the epidemiological and evolutionary consequences of targeting parasites within mosquitoes? Our synthesis argues that targeting parasites inside mosquitoes (i) can be modelled by readily expanding existing epidemiological frameworks; (ii) provides a functionally novel control method that has potential to be more robust to resistance evolution than targeting parasites in humans; and (iii) could extend the lifespan and clinical benefit of antimalarials used exclusively to treat humans.

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