Characterization of the infectious reservoir of malaria with an agent-based model calibrated to age-stratified parasite densities and infectiousness
Authored by Edward A Wenger, Philip A Eckhoff, Jaline Gerardin, Andre Lin Ouedraogo, Kevin A McCarthy
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1186/s12936-015-0751-y
Sponsors:
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Background: Elimination of malaria can only be achieved through removal
of all vectors or complete depletion of the infectious reservoir in
humans. Mechanistic models can be built to synthesize diverse
observations from the field collected under a variety of conditions and
subsequently used to query the infectious reservoir in great detail.
Methods: The EMOD model of malaria transmission was calibrated to
prevalence, incidence, asexual parasite density, gametocyte density, infection duration, and infectiousness data from nine study sites. The
infectious reservoir was characterized by age and parasite detectability
with diagnostics of varying sensitivity over a range of transmission
intensities with and without case management and vector control. Mass
screen-and-treat drug campaigns were tested for likelihood of achieving
elimination.
Results: The composition of the infectious reservoir is similar over a
range of transmission intensities, and higher intensity settings are
biased towards infections in children. Recent ramp-ups in case
management and use of insecticide-treated bed nets (ITNs) reduce the
infectious reservoir and shift the composition towards sub-microscopic
infections. Mass campaigns with anti-malarial drugs are highly effective
at interrupting transmission if deployed shortly after ITN campaigns.
Conclusions: Low-density infections comprise a substantial portion of
the infectious reservoir. Proper timing of vector control, seasonal
variation in transmission intensity and mass drug campaigns allows
lingering population immunity to help drive a region towards
elimination.
Tags
Epidemiology
Management
Elimination
Interventions
Plasmodium-falciparum
Area
Immunity
Seasonal transmission
Gametocyte density
Anopheles-gambiae