Autores
Thomas S Churcher, Andrew M Blagborough, Michael Delves, Chandra Ramakrishnan, Melissa C Kapulu, Andrew R Williams, Sumi Biswas, Dari F Da, Anna Cohuet, Robert E Sinden
Fecha de publicación
2012/10/31
Revista
International journal for parasitology
Volumen
42
Número
11
Páginas
1037-1044
Editor
Pergamon
Descripción
The standard membrane feeding assay (SMFA) is currently considered to be the ‘gold standard’ for assessing the effectiveness of malaria transmission blocking interventions (TBIs) in vivo. The operation and analysis of SMFAs has varied between laboratories: field scientists often measure TBI efficacy as a reduction in the prevalence of infected mosquitoes whilst laboratory scientists are more likely to quote efficacy as a change in the number of oocysts within the mosquito. These metrics give outputs that differ widely, resulting in a need for greater understanding of how the SMFA informs TBI assessment. Using data from 536 different assays (conducted on Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium berghei, in either Anopheles gambiae or Anopheles stephensi) it is shown that the relationship between these metrics is complex, yet predictable. Results demonstrate that the distribution of oocysts between mosquitoes is …
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TS Churcher, AM Blagborough, M Delves… - International journal for parasitology, 2012