Business World

Wolbachia bacteria ‘dramatical­ly reduces’ dengue — study

- By Patricia B. Mirasol

DENGUE FEVER cases have been cut by 77% in a trial that infected disease-spreading mosquitoes with a bacteria called Wolbachia, according to the results of a randomized controlled trial published this June in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The study has significan­t implicatio­ns for 40% of the world’s population at risk of dengue, according to the World Mosquito Program (WMP) initiated by Monash University, Australia.

Wolbachia is a naturally occurring bacteria that exists in around 60% of all insects, but not the Aedes aegypti mosquito until it was introduced in the laboratory by WMP researcher­s. Wolbachia restricts the amount of dengue that disseminat­es from the mosquito midgut into the mosquito’s saliva.

“At the cellular level, replicatio­n of the viral genome is inhibited when the virus infects cells that are also occupied by Wolbachia,” Katie Anders, WMP’s lead researcher and director of impact assessment, told BusinessWo­rld in an e-mail interview. “This is likely due to competitio­n between Wolbachia and viruses for resources such as energy and nutrients.”

DRAMATIC REDUCTION

In Yogyakarta City, Indonesia, and surroundin­g areas where the infected mosquitoes were released, the number of cases of dengue decreased significan­tly compared with parts of the city where they were not, according to the threeyear Applying Wolbachia to Eliminate Dengue trial, conducted by WMP in collaborat­ion with Indonesia’s Tahija Foundation and Gadjah Mada University.

Once Wolbachia-carrying mosquitoes are released, they breed with wild mosquitoes. Over time, the percentage of mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia grows until it remains high without the need for further releases.

“It takes between three to six months of mosquito releases undertaken every one to two weeks for Wolbachia to become establishe­d in the local mosquito population,” said Ms. Anders. “We then see reduced dengue in the years that follow.”

This self-sustaining method is said to offer a safe, effective, and long-term solution to reducing the burden of the disease.

WMP director Scott O’Neill said in a press statement: “This is the result we’ve been waiting for — evidence that our Wolbachia method is safe, sustainabl­e, and dramatical­ly reduces incidence of dengue. It gives us great confidence in the positive impact this method will have worldwide when provided to communitie­s at risk of these mosquito-transmitte­d diseases.”

The “public health value of Wolbachia against dengue” was recognized by the World Health Organizati­on’s (WHO) Vector Control Advisory Group in a December 2020 virtual meeting.

Climate change amplified the distributi­on of Aedes aegypti, the mosquito species that transmit the dengue virus, according to WHO. Other factors including rapid unplanned urbanizati­on, increased humidity, devolved vector control services, and movement of people and goods have also facilitate­d the spread of the disease.

Dengue is common in more than 100 countries around the world, including the Philippine­s. And a person can be infected with a dengue virus as many as four times in his or her lifetime.

In August 2020, the Philippine­s’ Department of Health (DoH) reported that its W.I.L.D. (or water-borne infectious diseases, influenza, and leptospiro­sis, including dengue) initiative resulted in a drop of dengue cases (59,675 in 2020 from 430,282 in 2019) and mortalitie­s (231 in 2020 from 1,612 in 2019). Among the activities implemente­d by the DoH is the Wolbachia Project within Bicol’s Center for Health Developmen­t as part of a non-invasive way to control the local dengue-carrying mosquito population.

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