Agent-Based Model Forecasts Aging of the Population of People Who Inject Drugs in Metropolitan Chicago and Changing Prevalence of Hepatitis C Infections
Authored by Atesmachew Hailegiorgis, Alexander Gutfraind, Basmattee Boodram, Nikhil Prachand, Harel Dahari, Marian E Major
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0137993
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
Repast
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
People who inject drugs (PWID) are at high risk for blood-borne
pathogens transmitted during the sharing of contaminated injection
equipment, particularly hepatitis C virus (HCV). HCV prevalence is
influenced by a complex interplay of drug-use behaviors, social
networks, and geography, as well as the availability of interventions, such as needle exchange programs. To adequately address this complexity
in HCV epidemic forecasting, we have developed a computational model, the Agent-based Pathogen Kinetics model (APK). APK simulates the PWID
population in metropolitan Chicago, including the social interactions
that result in HCV infection. We used multiple empirical data sources on
Chicago PWID to build a spatial distribution of an in silico PWID
population and modeled networks among the PWID by considering the
geography of the city and its suburbs. APK was validated against 2012
empirical data (the latest available) and shown to agree with network
and epidemiological surveys to within 1\%. For the period 2010-2020, APK
forecasts a decline in HCV prevalence of 0.8\% per year from 44(+/- 2)\%
to 36(+/- 5)\%, although some sub-populations would continue to have
relatively high prevalence, including Non-Hispanic Blacks, 48(+/- 5)\%.
The rate of decline will be lowest in Non-Hispanic Whites and we find, in a reversal of historical trends, that incidence among non-Hispanic
Whites would exceed incidence among Non-Hispanic Blacks (0.66 per 100
per years vs 0.17 per 100 person years). APK also forecasts an increase
in PWID mean age from 35(+/- 1) to 40(+/- 2) with a corresponding
increase from 59 (+/- 2)\% to 80(+/- 6)\% in the proportion of the
population >30 years old. Our studies highlight the importance of
analyzing subpopulations in disease predictions, the utility of computer
simulation for analyzing demographic and health trends among PWID and
serve as a tool for guiding intervention and prevention strategies in
Chicago, and other major cities.
Tags
Social networks
Mortality
transmission
United-states
Young adults-massachusetts
Noninjecting heroin users
Virus-infection
Human immunodeficiency
Viral-hepatitis
Risk behaviors