Philippine Daily Inquirer

Study: Game changer found in dengue fight

-

A three-year study in Indonesia has shown promising results in the fight against dengue by infecting disease-carrying mosquitos with harmless bacteria.

JAKARTA—Dengue fever infections dropped dramatical­ly in an Indonesian study where a bacteria was introduced into disease-carrying mosquitoes, offering hope in the battle against an illness that sickens millions annually around the world.

Results of the three-year study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine this week, found that infecting dengue-carrying mosquitoes with a harmless bacteria called Wolbachia led to a 77-percent drop in human cases.

Infections requiring hospitaliz­ation also fell by 86 percent in Wolbachia-treated areas of Yogyakarta, a city on Java Island where the experiment was conducted, researcher­s said.

The study was conducted by the World Mosquito Program at Monash University in Australia and Indonesia’s Gadjah Mada University.

“The 77-percent figure is honestly quite fantastic for a transmitta­ble disease and we’re very grateful with the result,” said Adi Utarini, a public health researcher from Gadjah Mada university who was a colead on the study.

Unable to replicate

The trial involved releasing Wolbachia into the mosquito population across specific parts of Yogyakarta to measure how it impacted the incidence of infections among 3-to 45-year-olds.

It has now been expanded to other parts of the city.

Wolbachia suppresses the ability of the virus to replicate in dengue-carrying Aedes aegypti mosquitoes and cause infections when they bite humans.

Previous trials involving Wolbachia—commonly found in fruit flies and other insects— also showed positive results in reducing dengue cases, researcher­s said.

Global battle

Scientists hope the method could be a game changer in a global battle against the disease, which can sometimes be fatal.

Symptoms typically include body aches, fever and nausea.

“This is the result we’ve been waiting for,” said World Mosquito Program director Scott O’Neill.

“We have evidence 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,” he added.

Dengue is the most rapidly spreading mosquito-borne disease in the world with more than 50 million cases globally every year, including about 8 million in Indonesia.

Studies have also shown that the Wolbachia method can be effective in preventing the transmissi­on of Zika, chikunguny­a, yellow fever and other mosquito-borne illnesses, researcher­s said.

 ??  ?? KAHIT PESTE KA, MAY KATAPAT KA!
KAHIT PESTE KA, MAY KATAPAT KA!

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines