| Literature DB >> 22651899 |
E Massad1, J Rocklov2, A Wilder-Smith2.
Abstract
Dengue is the most frequent arboviral disease and is expanding geographically. Dengue is also increasingly being reported in travellers, in particular in travellers to Thailand. However, data to quantify the risk of travellers acquiring dengue when travelling to Thailand are lacking. Using mathematical modelling, we set out to estimate the risk of non-immune persons acquiring dengue when travelling to Thailand. The model is deterministic with stochastic parameters and assumes a Poisson distribution for the mosquitoes' biting rate and a Gamma distribution for the probability of acquiring dengue from an infected mosquito. From the force of infection we calculated the risk of dengue acquisition for travellers to Thailand arriving in a typical year (averaged over a 17-year period) in the high season of transmission. A traveller arriving in the high season of transmission and remaining for 7 days has a risk of acquiring dengue of 0·2% (95% CI 0·16-0·23), whereas the risk for travel of 15 and 30 days' duration is 0·46% (95% CI 0·41-0·50) and 0·81% (95% CI 0·76-0·87), respectively. Our data highlight that the risk of non-immune travellers acquiring dengue in Thailand is substantial. The incidence of 0·81% after a 1-month stay is similar to that reported in prospective seroconversion studies in Israeli travellers to Thailand, highlighting that our models are consistent with actual data. Risk estimates based on mathematical modelling offer more detailed information depending on various travel scenarios, and will help the travel medicine provider give better evidence-based advice for travellers to dengue-endemic countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22651899 PMCID: PMC3539241 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268812000507
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 4.434
Model parameters, biological meaning, values and sources
| Parameter | Meaning | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average daily biting rate | 0·164 | [ | |
| Fraction of actually infective bites | 0·088 | Fitted to data | |
| μH | Human natural mortality rate | 3·5 × 10−5 day−1 | [16] |
| Human birth rate | 8 day−1 | [16] | |
| Human carrying capacity | 16 × 106 | [16] | |
| αH | Dengue mortality in humans | 10−3 day−1 | [17] |
| γH | Human recovery rate | 0·143 day−1 | [17] |
| Susceptible eggs hatching rate | 0·15 day−1 | [18] | |
| Winter modulation parameter | 0·07 | Assumed | |
| Winter modulation parameter | 0·06 | Assumed | |
| γM | Mosquito latency rate | 0·143 day−1 | – |
| Frequency of seasonal cycles | 2·8 × 10−3 day−1 | Assumed | |
| μM | Mosquito natural mortality rate | 0·263 day−1 | [19] |
| αM | Dengue mortality in mosquitoes | Negligible | – |
| Oviposition rate | 50 day−1 | [19] | |
| Infected eggs hatching rate | 0·15 day−1 | [19] | |
| Proportion of infected eggs | 0·5 | Assumed | |
| κE | Egg carrying capacity | 9·8 × 107 | Assumed |
| μE | Egg natural mortality rate | 0·1 day−1 | [19] |
| 0·087 | Fitted to data |
Fig. 1.The model's fit to the actual national epidemiology of dengue in Thailand averaged over 17 years, from 1990 to 2007. Symbols (•) represent actual data [data from the national epidemiology of Thailand as obtained from the South East Asia Regional Office of the World Health Organization (http://www.searo.who.int/LinkFiles/Dengue_dengue_Thailand.pdf)]. The continuous line (––) represents data obtained from our mathematical model.
Fig. 2.The model's simulation for non-infected (thick line) and infected (thin line) mosquitoes along with the definition of ‘seasons’: winter is the dry season, summer is the rainy reason, spring and autumn are the interim seasons approximately corresponding with the calendar months of the Northern hemisphere.
Risk of acquiring dengue in travellers to Thailand depending on season and duration of travel average risk of dengue in percentage
| Season/time in the area | 1 week | 2 weeks | 3 weeks | 4 weeks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winter (dry season) | 0·000082 | 0·000146 | 0·000202 | 0·000353 |
| Spring (interim period) | 0·00756 | 0·0296 | 0·0555 | 0·0965 |
| Summer (wet season) | 0·0492 | 0·111 | 0·197 | 0·29 |
| Autumn (following wet season) | 0·199 | 0·425 | 0·599 | 0·81 |
All values given are percentages.
Fig. 3.Continuous lines represents the average of 1000 stochastic simulations of the model. Dotted lines represent the 95% confidence intervals.