A Unified Framework for the Infection Dynamics of Zoonotic Spillover and Spread
Authored by Iacono Giovanni Lo, Andrew A Cunningham, Elisabeth Fichet-Calvet, Robert F Garry, Donald S Grant, Melissa Leach, Lina M Moses, Gordon Nichols, John S Schieffelin, Jeffrey G Shaffer, Colleen T Webb, James L N Wood
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004957
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A considerable amount of disease is transmitted from animals to humans
and many of these zoonoses are neglected tropical diseases. As outbreaks
of SARS, avian influenza and Ebola have demonstrated, however, zoonotic
diseases are serious threats to global public health and are not just
problems confined to remote regions. There are two fundamental, and
poorly studied, stages of zoonotic disease emergence: `spillover', i.e.
transmission of pathogens from animals to humans, and `stuttering
transmission', i.e. when limited human-to-human infections occur, leading to self-limiting chains of transmission. We developed a
transparent, theoretical framework, based on a generalization of Poisson
processes with memory of past human infections, that unifies these
stages. Once we have quantified pathogen dynamics in the reservoir, with
some knowledge of the mechanism of contact, the approach provides a tool
to estimate the likelihood of spillover events. Comparisons with
independent agent-based models demonstrates the ability of the framework
to correctly estimate the relative contributions of human-to-human vs
animal transmission. As an illustrative example, we applied our model to
Lassa fever, a rodent-borne, viral haemorrhagic disease common in West
Africa, for which data on human outbreaks were available. The approach
developed here is general and applicable to a range of zoonoses. This
kind of methodology is of crucial importance for the scientific, medical
and public health communities working at the interface between animal
and human diseases to assess the risk associated with the disease and to
plan intervention and appropriate control measures. The Lassa case study
revealed important knowledge gaps, and opportunities, arising from
limited knowledge of the temporal patterns in reporting, abundance of
and infection prevalence in, the host reservoir.
Tags
Epidemic
Science
Populations
Virus
Sierra-leone
Lassa fever
Mastomys-natalensis
Disease emergence
Pathogens
Rodents