Literature DB >> 29974201

Host contact structure is important for the recurrence of Influenza A.

J M Jaramillo1, Junling Ma2, P van den Driessche1, Sanling Yuan3.   

Abstract

An important characteristic of influenza A is its ability to escape host immunity through antigenic drift. A novel influenza A strain that causes a pandemic confers full immunity to infected individuals. Yet when the pandemic strain drifts, these individuals will have decreased immunity to drifted strains in the following seasonal epidemics. We compute the required decrease in immunity so that a recurrence is possible. Models for influenza A must make assumptions on the contact structure on which the disease spreads. By considering local stability of the disease free equilibrium via computation of the reproduction number, we show that the classical random mixing assumption predicts an unrealistically large decrease of immunity before a recurrence is possible. We improve over the classical random mixing assumption by incorporating a contact network structure. A complication of contact networks is correlations induced by the initial pandemic. We provide a novel analytic derivation of such correlations and show that contact networks may require a dramatically smaller loss of immunity before recurrence. Hence, the key new insight in our paper is that on contact networks the establishment of a new strain is possible for much higher immunity levels of previously infected individuals than predicted by the commonly used random mixing assumption. This suggests that stable contacts like classmates, coworkers and family members are a crucial path for the spread of influenza in human populations.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Antigenic drift; Contact network; Correlations; Influenza; Reproduction number

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29974201     DOI: 10.1007/s00285-018-1263-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Math Biol        ISSN: 0303-6812            Impact factor:   2.259


  36 in total

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Authors:  P van den Driessche; James Watmough
Journal:  Math Biosci       Date:  2002 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 2.144

2.  Dynamics of annual influenza A epidemics with immuno-selection.

Authors:  Viggo Andreasen
Journal:  J Math Biol       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 2.259

3.  A note on a paper by Erik Volz: SIR dynamics in random networks.

Authors:  Joel C Miller
Journal:  J Math Biol       Date:  2010-03-23       Impact factor: 2.259

4.  On the definition and the computation of the basic reproduction ratio R0 in models for infectious diseases in heterogeneous populations.

Authors:  O Diekmann; J A Heesterbeek; J A Metz
Journal:  J Math Biol       Date:  1990       Impact factor: 2.259

5.  A new pandemic influenza A(H1N1) genetic variant predominated in the winter 2010 influenza season in Australia, New Zealand and Singapore.

Authors:  I G Barr; L Cui; N Komadina; R T Lee; R T Lin; Y Deng; N Caldwell; R Shaw; S Maurer-Stroh
Journal:  Euro Surveill       Date:  2010-10-21

6.  The dynamics of cocirculating influenza strains conferring partial cross-immunity.

Authors:  V Andreasen; J Lin; S A Levin
Journal:  J Math Biol       Date:  1997-08       Impact factor: 2.259

7.  Insights from unifying modern approximations to infections on networks.

Authors:  Thomas House; Matt J Keeling
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2010-06-10       Impact factor: 4.118

8.  Evolution and emergence of infectious diseases in theoretical and real-world networks.

Authors:  Gabriel E Leventhal; Alison L Hill; Martin A Nowak; Sebastian Bonhoeffer
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2015-01-16       Impact factor: 14.919

9.  Transmissibility of 1918 pandemic influenza.

Authors:  Christina E Mills; James M Robins; Marc Lipsitch
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2004-12-16       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  Seroprevalence of influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 virus antibody, England, 2010 and 2011.

Authors:  Katja Hoschler; Catherine Thompson; Nick Andrews; Monica Galiano; Richard Pebody; Joanna Ellis; Elaine Stanford; Marc Baguelin; Elizabeth Miller; Maria Zambon
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2012-11       Impact factor: 6.883

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