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Effectiveness of Wolbachia-infected mosquito deployments in reducing the incidence of dengue and other Aedes-borne diseases in Niterói, Brazil: A quasi-experimental study.

Sofia B PintoThais I S RibackGabriel SylvestreGuilherme CostaJulia PeixotoFernando B S DiasStephanie K TanamasCameron P SimmonsSuzanne M DufaultPeter A RyanScott Leslie O'NeillFrederico C MuzziSimon KutcherJacqui MontgomeryBenjamin R GreenRuth SmithymanAna EppinghausValeria SaraceniBetina DurovniKatherine L AndersLuciano A Moreira
Published in: PLoS neglected tropical diseases (2021)
We demonstrate that wMel Wolbachia can be successfully introgressed into Ae. aegypti populations in a large and complex urban setting, and that a significant public health benefit from reduced incidence of Aedes-borne disease accrues even where the prevalence of wMel in local mosquito populations is moderate and spatially heterogeneous. These findings are consistent with the results of randomised and non-randomised field trials in Indonesia and northern Australia, and are supportive of the Wolbachia biocontrol method as a multivalent intervention against dengue, chikungunya and Zika.
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