| Literature DB >> 27788412 |
Sema Nickbakhsh1, Matthew D Hall2, Ilaria Dorigatti3, Samantha J Lycett2, Paolo Mulatti4, Isabella Monne4, Alice Fusaro4, Mark E J Woolhouse2, Andrew Rambaut5, Rowland R Kao6.
Abstract
It is well known that highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) viruses emerge through mutation of precursor low pathogenic avian influenza (LPAI) viruses in domestic poultry populations. The potential for immunological cross-protection between these pathogenic variants is recognised but the epidemiological impact during co-circulation is not well understood. Here we use mathematical models to investigate whether altered flock infection parameters consequent to primary LPAI infections can impact on the spread of HPAI at the population level. First we used mechanistic models reflecting the co-circulatory dynamics of LPAI and HPAI within a single commercial poultry flock. We found that primary infections with LPAI led to HPAI prevalence being maximised under a scenario of high but partial cross-protection. We then tested the population impact in spatially-explicit simulations motivated by a major avian influenza A(H7N1) epidemic that afflicted the Italian poultry industry in 1999-2001. We found that partial cross-protection can lead to a prolongation of HPAI epidemic duration. Our findings have implications for the control of HPAI in poultry particularly for settings in which LPAI and HPAI frequently co-circulate.Entities:
Keywords: Cross-protection; Epidemiology; Interference; Mathematical models; Poultry
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27788412 DOI: 10.1016/j.epidem.2016.10.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemics ISSN: 1878-0067 Impact factor: 4.396