Dengue Suppression by Male Wolbachia-Infected Mosquitoes
Dengue Suppression by Male Wolbachia-Infected Mosquitoes
Tags: Asia, Cytoplasmic incompatibility, Dengue, WolbachiaJue Tao Lim, Ph.D., Chee-Seng Chong, Ph.D., Chia-Chen Chang, Ph.D., et al., New England Journal of Medicine, 2026.
A total of 393,236 residents lived in the intervention clusters, and 331,192 lived in the control clusters. Adult wild-type A. aegypti populations were suppressed across the intervention clusters. The baseline average abundance of the mosquitoes (number of adult female mosquitoes trapped divided by number of traps) was 0.18 and 0.19 in the intervention and control clusters, respectively; from 3 months after the initiation of the intervention until the end of the 24-month trial period, the average abundance was 0.041 and 0.277, respectively. In the intention-to-treat analysis at 6 months or more, the percentage of residents in the intervention clusters who were dengue-positive was lower than that in the control clusters (354 of 5722 tests [6%] vs. 1519 of 7080 tests [21%]). The protective efficacy of the intervention, calculated as (1−odds ratio)×100, ranged from 71 to 72% with 3 to 12 months or more of wolbachia mosquito exposure, as represented by odds ratios of 0.28 to 0.29. Release of sterile wolbachia-infected male A. aegypti mosquitoes reduced vector populations and the risk of dengue infection in Singapore.

