CystiSim - An Agent-Based Model for Taenia solium Transmission and Control
Authored by Niko Speybroeck, Brecht Devleesschauwer, Uffe Christian Braae, Sarah Gabriel, Pierre Dorny, Pascal Magnussen, Paul Torgerson, Maria Vang Johansen
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005184
Sponsors:
CYSTINET
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Taenia solium taeniosis/cysticercosis was declared eradicable by the
International Task Force for Disease Eradication in 1993, but remains a
neglected zoonosis. To assist in the attempt to regionally eliminate
this parasite, we developed cystiSim, an agent-based model for T. solium
transmission and control. The model was developed in R and available as
an R package (http://cran.r-project.org/package=cystiSim). cystiSim was
adapted to an observed setting using field data from Tanzania, but
adaptable to other settings if necessary. The model description adheres
to the Overview, Design concepts, and Details (ODD) protocol and
consists of two entities D pigs and humans. Pigs acquire cysticercosis
through the environment or by direct contact with a tapeworm carrier's
faeces. Humans acquire taeniosis from slaughtered pigs proportional to
their infection intensity. The model allows for evaluation of three
interventions measures or combinations hereof: treatment of humans, treatment of pigs, and pig vaccination, and allows for customary
coverage and efficacy settings. cystiSim is the first agent-based
transmission model for T. solium and suggests that control using a
strategy consisting of an intervention only targeting the porcine host
is possible, but that coverage and efficacy must be high if elimination
is the ultimate goal. Good coverage of the intervention is important, but can be compensated for by including an additional intervention
targeting the human host. cystiSim shows that the scenarios combining
interventions in both hosts, mass drug administration to humans, and
vaccination and treatment of pigs, have a high probability of success if
coverage of 75\% can be maintained over at least a four year period. In
comparison with an existing mathematical model for T. solium
transmission, cystiSim also includes parasite maturation, host immunity, and environmental contamination. Adding these biological parameters to
the model resulted in new insights in the potential effect of
intervention measures.
Tags
Infection
Prevalence
Risk-factors
Health-education intervention
Porcine cysticercosis
Mass chemotherapy
Mbeya region
Field trial
Pigs
Oxfendazole