| Literature DB >> 17015285 |
Dinis Gökaydin1, José B Oliveira-Martins, Isabel Gordo, M Gabriela M Gomes.
Abstract
The awareness that pathogens can adapt and evolve over relatively short time-scales is changing our view of infectious disease epidemiology and control. Research on the transmission dynamics of antigenically diverse pathogens is progressing and there is increasing recognition for the need of new concepts and theories. Mathematical models have been developed considering the modelling unit in two extreme scales: either diversity is not explicitly represented or diversity is represented at the finest scale of single variants. Here, we use an intermediate approach and construct a model at the scale of clusters of variants. The model captures essential properties of more detailed systems and is much more amenable to mathematical treatment. Specificities of pathogen clusters and the overall potential for transmission determine the reinfection rates. These are, in turn, important regulators of cluster dynamics. Ultimately, we detect a reinfection threshold (RT) that separates different behaviours along the transmissibility axis: below RT, levels of infection are low and cluster substitutions are probable; while above RT, levels of infection are high and multiple cluster coexistence is the most probable outcome.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17015285 PMCID: PMC2358964 DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2006.0159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J R Soc Interface ISSN: 1742-5662 Impact factor: 4.118