| Literature DB >> 19073189 |
Simon Brooker1, Archie C A Clements.
Abstract
Multiple parasite infections are widespread in the developing world and understanding their geographical distribution is important for spatial targeting of differing intervention packages. We investigated the spatial epidemiology of mono- and co-infection with helminth parasites in East Africa and developed a geostatistical model to predict infection risk. The data used for the analysis were taken from standardised school surveys of Schistosoma mansoni and hookworm (Ancylostoma duodenale/Necator americanus) carried out between 1999 and 2005 in East Africa. Prevalence of mono- and co-infection was modelled using satellite-derived environmental and demographic variables as potential predictors. A Bayesian multi-nominal geostatistical model was developed for each infection category for producing maps of predicted co-infection risk. We show that heterogeneities in co-infection with S. mansoni and hookworm are influenced primarily by the distribution of S. mansoni, rather than the distribution of hookworm, and that temperature, elevation and distance to large water bodies are reliable predictors of the spatial large-scale distribution of co-infection. On the basis of these results, we developed a validated geostatistical model of the distribution of co-infection at a scale that is relevant for planning regional disease control efforts that simultaneously target multiple parasite species.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19073189 PMCID: PMC2644303 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpara.2008.10.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Parasitol ISSN: 0020-7519 Impact factor: 3.981
Prevalence (% infected) of infection and mono- and co-infection with Schistosoma mansoni and hookworm among 27,729 schoolchildren from 395 schools in East Africa.
| Study region | Total | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bondo, Kenya 2005 | Busia, Kenya 2000 | NW Tanzania 2005 | Uganda 1999–2002 | (range by school) | |
| No. of children | 1092 | 1677 | 8617 | 16,343 | 27,729 |
| 14.3 | 22.3 | 4.4 | 26.1 | 18.7 (0–97.3) | |
| Hookworm | 47.2 | 77.1 | 48.0 | 50.2 | 51.0 (0–95.7) |
| No infection | 44.9 | 16.5 | 50.3 | 38.0 | 40.9 (0–100) |
| 7.9 | 6.4 | 1.7 | 11.8 | 8.1 (0–80.0) | |
| Hookworm mono-infection | 40.8 | 61.2 | 45.2 | 35.9 | 40.5 (0–91.6) |
| Co-infection | 6.4 | 15.9 | 2.8 | 14.3 | 10.5 (0–71.2) |
Fig. 1Observed heterogeneity of parasite co-infection among schoolchildren in East Africa. (A) Frequency distribution and (B) geographical distribution of mono- and co-infection with Schistosoma mansoni and hookworm among 27,729 schoolchildren from 395 schools in East Africa.
Bayesian multinomial logistic regression model for mono- and co-infection with Schistosoma mansoni and hookworm with geostatistical random effects, based on parasitological data among 27,729 schoolchildren from 395 schools in East Africa.
| Variable | OR posterior mean (95% posterior CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Intercept | −3.838 (−4.696 to −2.888) | |
| Elevation | −1.050 (−1.507 to −0.550) | 0.350 (0.222–0.577) |
| Distance to permanent water body | −1.475 (−2.353 to −0.793) | 0.229 (0.095–0.452) |
| Urban–rural 3 | −0.843 (−1.570 to −0.234) | 0.430 (0.208–0.792) |
| Urban–rural 4 | −0.477 (−1.492 to 0.367) | 0.621 (0.225–1.444) |
| LST | −0.129 (−0.475 to 0.221) | 0.879 (0.622–1.247) |
| Sex (female) | −0.154 (−0.269 to −0.038) | 0.857 (0.764–0.963) |
| Age (9–10 years) | 0.515 (0.315–0.721) | 1.674 (1.370–2.057) |
| Age (11–13 years) | 0.893 (0.725–1.060) | 2.443 (2.064–2.886) |
| Age (⩾14 years) | 1.055 (0.785–1.312) | 2.872 (2.192–3.714) |
| Phi (rate of decay) | 3.517 (1.727–7.214) | |
| Variance of spatial random effect | 6.388 (3.523–11.780) | |
| Intercept | −0.636 (−1.135 to −0.323) | |
| Elevation | −0.260 (−0.429 to −0.113) | 0.771 (0.651–0.893) |
| Distance to permanent water body | −0.063 (−0.277 to 0.142) | 0.939 (0.758–1.153) |
| Urban–rural 3 | −0.016 (−0.386 to 0.317) | 0.984 (0.680–1.373) |
| Urban–rural 4 | 0.150 (−0.194–0.593) | 1.162 (0.824–1.810) |
| LST | −0.513 (-0.686 to −0.330) | 0.599 (0.504–0.719) |
| Sex (female) | −0.094 (−0.151 to −0.034) | 0.910 (0.860–0.966) |
| Age (9–10 years) | 0.153 (0.043–0.261) | 1.165 (1.044–1.298) |
| Age (11–13 years) | 0.435 (0.329–0.539) | 1.545 (1.390–1.714) |
| Age (⩾14 years) | 0.631 (0.489–0.762) | 1.880 (1.630–2.143) |
| Phi (rate of decay) | 4.980 (3.383–7.332) | |
| Variance of spatial random effect | 1.311 (0.984–1.760) | |
| Intercept | −4.352 (−5.024 to −3.744) | |
| Elevation | −1.206 (−1.626 to −0.754) | 0.299 (0.197–0.471) |
| Distance to permanent water body | −1.203 (−1.736 to −0.546) | 0.300 (0.176–0.579) |
| Urban–rural 3 | −0.499 (−1.037 to 0.024) | 0.607 (0.355–1.024) |
| Urban–rural 4 | −0.290 (−1.165 to 0.481) | 0.748 (0.312–1.618) |
| LST | −0.563 (−1.170 to −0.139) | 0.570 (0.310–0.870) |
| Sex (female) | −0.364 (−0.465 to −0.259) | 0.695 (0.628–0.772) |
| Age (9–10 years) | 0.597 (0.416–0.791) | 1.816 (1.516–2.206) |
| Age (11–13 years) | 1.096 (0.937–1.259) | 2.992 (2.553–3.522) |
| Age (⩾14 years) | 1.344 (1.103–1.581) | 3.834 (3.013–4.860) |
| Phi (rate of decay) | 3.758 (2.101–7.363) | |
| Variance of spatial random effect | 6.339 (3.977–9.954) | |
CI, credible interval; LST, land surface temperature.
Fig. 2Predicted distribution of (A) Schistosoma mansoni mono-infection, (B) hookworm mono-infection, (C) S. mansoni–hookworm co-infection, and (D) SD of the predicted S. mansoni–hookworm co-infection among schoolchildren in East Africa. Note the different legend categories for each map for presentation purposes.
Fig. 3Map of the spatial random effect (RE) component of the predictions for Schistosoma mansoni–hookworm co-infection.