| Literature DB >> 23894302 |
Jonathan L Zelner1, Benjamin A Lopman, Aron J Hall, Sebastien Ballesteros, Bryan T Grenfell.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Norovirus (NoV) transmission may be impacted by changes in symptom intensity. Sudden onset of vomiting, which may cause an initial period of hyper-infectiousness, often marks the beginning of symptoms. This is often followed by: a 1-3 day period of milder symptoms, environmental contamination following vomiting, and post-symptomatic shedding that may result in transmission at progressively lower rates. Existing models have not included time-varying infectiousness, though representing these features could add utility to models of NoV transmission.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23894302 PMCID: PMC3722229 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Observations for 18 households with non-index cases.
The figure illustrates the time course of infection in the 18 households in which there was a non-index case who became ill after the onset of symptoms in the index case. Filled boxes indicate an individual who dined at the point-source and became ill. Filled circles indicate individuals who became ill and did not dine at the point-source. Hollow boxes and circles along the right margin indicate the number of individuals in the household who did and did not dine at the point source and did not become ill, respectively. The additional 52 households in the analysis with no secondary cases are not pictured.
Figure 2Illustration of model structure for Models 1, 2 & 3.
The figure illustrates the change in infectiousness over time, for Model 1 (SEIR; top), Model 2 (Exponential decay; middle) and Model 3 (Burst; bottom). is the force of infection, i.e. the rate at which susceptible individuals are recruited to the latent class, E, and is the mean rate at which infected individuals progress to infectiousness. The asymptomatic class, A, and recovered class, R, are omitted from the figure for visual clarity.
Parameters and definitions.
| Model | Parameter | Definition | Value | Source |
|
|
| Probability of infection at point source | – | EST |
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| Relative infectiousness of asymptomatics | 0.05 | See text | |
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| Proportion of cases asymptomatic | [0.0, 0.4] | Atmar et al. 2006 | |
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| Mean duration of latency | 1 day | See text | |
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| Shape parameter of latent period distribution | 4 | See text | |
|
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| Daily symptomatic transmission rate | – | EST |
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| Mean duration of symptomatic infectiousness | – | EST | |
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| Shape par. of infectious period duration | – | EST | |
|
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| Total infectiousness | – | EST |
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| Mean day of infectivity profile | – | EST | |
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| Total infectiousness | – | EST |
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| Mean day of post-onset infectivity | – | EST | |
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| Proportion of infectiousness at onset | – | See text |
The table lists parameters used in each model as well as fixed values and ranges of parameters assumed or estimated separately from the current analysis. Entries marked ‘EST’ indicate parameters estimated in the analysis. Model-specific parameters are denoted by a subscript.
Parameter estimates for Models 1–3.
| Model | Para meter | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | |||
| Est | 95% CI | Est | 95% CI | Est | 95% CI | ||
|
|
| 0.55 | (0.38, 0.71) | 0.55 | (0.38, 0.71) | 0.54 | (0.38, 0.71) |
|
|
| – | – | 0.13 | (0.07, 0.21) | 0.14 | (0.08, 0.22) |
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| – | – | 2.78 | (1.55, 4.87) | 3.89 | (2.20, 4.95) | |
|
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| 0.05 | (0.02, 0.10) | – | – | – | – |
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| 2.98 | (1.22, 4.79) | – | – | – | – | |
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| 1.04 | (0.07, 3.63) | – | – | – | – | |
Descriptive characteristics of household outbreak data compared to 10?4 simulations from fitted Models 1–3.
| Data | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | |||||
| Descriptive Statistic | Value | Range | Value | 5th–95th Quantile | Value | 5th–95th Quantile | Value | 5th–95th Quantile |
| Avg#secondary cases (in hh w/1+ cases) | 1.3 | (1.0, 4.0) | 1.2 | (1.0, 3.0) | 1.3 | (1.0, 3.0) | 1.3 | (1.0, 3.0) |
| Avg household outbreak | 3.1 | (0.5, 10.0) | 2.8 | (0.5, 10.0) | 3.4 | (0.5, 11.0) | 2.9 | (0.5, 10.0) |
| Avg serial interval (days) | 2.3 | (0.5, 8.0) | 2.6 | (0.5, 8.0) | 2.7 | (0.6, 9.0) | 2.3 | (0.5, 9.5) |
| Probability no | 0.62 | – | 0.70 | – | 0.63 | – | 0.64 | – |
| Recrudescence | 0.17 | – | 0.22 | – | 0.29 | – | 0.21 | – |
Figure 3Fitted infectivity profiles for Models 2 & 3.
The figure shows infectiousness as a function of time since symptom onset for the estimated values of the exponential decay model (Model 2; solid line) and burst model (Model 3; dashed line).