| Literature DB >> 32552759 |
Sokhna Dieng1,2, El Hadj Ba3, Badara Cissé4, Kankoe Sallah5,6, Abdoulaye Guindo5,7, Boukary Ouedraogo5,8, Martine Piarroux9, Stanislas Rebaudet10,11, Renaud Piarroux12, Jordi Landier5, Cheikh Sokhna3, Jean Gaudart13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In malaria endemic areas, identifying spatio-temporal hotspots is becoming an important element of innovative control strategies targeting transmission bottlenecks. The aim of this work was to describe the spatio-temporal variation of malaria hotspots in central Senegal and to identify the meteorological, environmental, and preventive factors that influence this variation.Entities:
Keywords: Geostatistical analyses; Malaria hotspots; Non-linear associations; Spatial clusters; Spatio-temporal dynamic
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32552759 PMCID: PMC7301493 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-020-05145-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Evolution of weekly malaria incidence and rainfall through transmission periods. Malaria incidence (continuous red curve); High Transmission Periods (HTP, in grey) and Low Transmission Periods (LTP, in white) with their duration (weeks, in black) and cumulative incidence rates (red numbers); total weekly rainfall (in blue)
Characteristics of transmission periods and hotspots
| Period: (cumulative inca), dates, duration | Hotspot status | Number of villages | Cumulative incidence rate a | SMCb | Weekly average rainfall | Dominant vegetation typed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 LTP (0.93) 01/01/2008 - 30/06/2008 - 26 weeks | Hotspot | 19 | 9.82 | 0 (0.00%) | 1.9 (0.99) | Mixed (63.16) |
| Non-Hotspot | 556 | 0.44 | 0 (0.00%) | 1.6 (0.77) | Mixed (59.35) | |
2008–2009 HTP (14.88) 01/07/2008 – 12/01/2009 – 28 weeks | Hotspot | 128 | 33.53 | 28 (21.87%) | 26.41 (1.78) | Mixed (88.28) |
| Non-Hotspot | 447 | 5.46 | 47 (10.51%) | 22.59 (2.46) | Mixed (51.23) | |
2009 LTP (0.88) 13/01/2009 – 03/08/2009 – 29 weeks | Hotspot | 27 | 10.66 | 0 (0.00%) | 10.54 (2.02) | Mixed (96.3) |
| Non-Hotspot | 548 | 0.5 | 0 (0.00%) | 8.26 (1.57) | Mixed (83.58) | |
2009–2010 HTP (7.53) 04/08/2009 – 15/02/2010 – 28 weeks | Hotspot | 62 | 27.04 | 23 (37.1%) | 20.61 (1.79) | Mixed (93.55) |
| Non-Hotspot | 513 | 5.17 | 201 (39.18%) | 18.21 (2.24) | Mixed (83.04) | |
2010 LTP (0.83) 16/02/2010 – 12/07/2010 – 21 weeks | Hotspot | 22 | 12.61 | 0 (0.00%) | 2.43 (1.46) | Mixed (68.18) |
| Non-Hotspot | 553 | 0.41 | 0 (0.00%) | 3.39 (1.58) | Mixed (62.03) | |
2010–2011 HTP (29.9) 13/07/2010 – 24/01/2011 – 28 weeks | Hotspot | 142 | 80.26 | 77 (54.22%) | 23.4 (1.49) | Mixed (57.04) |
| Non-Hotspot | 433 | 19.61 | 294 (67.9%) | 22.95 (2.98) | Mixed (63.97) | |
2011 LTP (2.73) 25/01/2011 – 22/08/2011 – 30 weeks | Hotspot | 43 | 12.69 | 0 (0.00%) | 8.39 (1.25) | Mixed (72.09) |
| Non-Hotspot | 532 | 1.57 | 0 (0.00%) | 9.52 (0.83) | Grasslands (40.79) | |
2011–2012 HTP (14.62) 23/08/2011 – 09/01/2012 – 20 weeks | Hotspot | 105 | 34.35 | 0 (0.00%) | 18.52 (0.51) | Grasslands (35.24) |
| Non-Hotspot | 470 | 9.59 | 0 (0.00%) | 18.93 (1.53) | Mixed (41.70) | |
2012 LTP (1.66) 10/01/2012 – 09/07/2012 – 26 weeks | Hotspot | 10 | 19.16 | 0 (0.00%) | 4.93 (0.69) | Mixed (60) |
| Non-Hotspot | 565 | 1.24 | 0 (0.00%) | 3.61 (0.8) | Mixed (42.83) | |
2012 HTP (38.1) 10/07/2012 – 31/12/2012 – 24 weeks | Hotspot | 147 | 119.24 | 0 (0.00%) | 31.71 (2.36) | Grasslands (59.86) |
| Non-Hotspot | 428 | 25.74 | 0 (0.00%) | 30.49 (1.93) | Mixed (51.17) |
High Transmission Periods (HTP) and Low Transmission Periods (LTP) with cumulative incidence rate, start and end dates, and duration (in weeks); hotspot status of villages (hotspot or non-hotspot); number of hotspot and non-hotspot villages; cumulative incidence rate in hotspot and non-hotspot villages; number and percentage of hotspot and non-hotspot villages that received seasonal malaria chemoprevention (SMC); weekly average rainfall and standard deviation in hotspot and non-hotspot villages; dominant vegetation type (open shrublands, grasslands, croplands, mixed vegetation) in hotspot and non-hotspot villages for each period
a Cumulative incidence rate (cases/100,000 person-weeks)
b Number and percentage of villages that received SMC (seasonal malaria chemoprevention)
c Standard deviation
d Dominant vegetation type for each period
The different hotspot types and the associated number of villages
| Hotspot type | Hotspot during all 5 LTPs | Hotspot mainly during HTPs | Hotspot mainly during LTPs | Hotspot equally during LTPs and HTPs | Never a hotspot | Hotspot only during HTPs | Hotspot only during LTPs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of villages (%) | 3 (0.52%) | 47 (8.17%) | 5 (0.87%) | 13 (2.26%) | 205 (35.65%) | 288 (50.1%) | 14 (2.43%) |
Number and percentage of villages that were a hotspot during all 5 LTPs, mainly during HTPs, mainly during LTPs, equally during LTPs and HTPs, never, only during HTPs, and only during LTPs
Fig. 2Spatio-temporal distribution of hotspot villages and vegetation type during transmission periods from 2008 to 2012. Hotspot villages (red dots) and non-hotspot villages (black dots); vegetation type (land cover: open shrublands in beige, grasslands in orange, croplands in yellow, and mixed vegetation in green) according to transmission periods (LTP, HTP) from 2008 to 2012 in Bambey and Fatick health districts, Senegal. Acknowledgements:the Senegal shapefile were downloaded in gadm website and Landcover rasters extracted from MODIS NASA website.
Fig. 3Temporal evolution of the risk of being hotspot with 95%CI according to vegetation type. Temporal evolution of the risk of being a hotspot (continuous black curve) with 95% confidence interval (discontinuous black curves) according to each vegetation type: open shrublands (panel a), grasslands (panel b), croplands (panel c), and mixed vegetation (panel d). HTPs and LTPs are indicated in grey and white, respectively. The vertical red lines indicate the dates of interest, at which villages were at risk of being hotspot. The horizontal red lines indicate the zero reference line
Fig. 4Evolution of the risk of being hotspot with 95%CI according to rainfall and vegetation type. Evolution of the risk of being a hotspot (continuous black curve) with 95% confidence interval (discontinuous black curves) according to weekly rainfall and vegetation type: open shrublands (panel a), grasslands (panel b), croplands (panel c), and mixed vegetation (panel d). Vertical red lines show the amount of rainfall starting from which rainfall became a risk factor
Fig. 5Spatial distribution of the different hotspot types and the associated spatial risk of being hotspot. The black curves are the contours of bivariate smoothed values; the colour bar is the ascending level of risk indicated by the spline smoothing function values (smoothed values) from blue to red; red dots represent the villages that were a hotspot during all 5 LTPs (Hot5LTP), orange dots those that were a hotspot mainly during HTPs (MajoHotHTP), yellow dots those that were a hotspot mainly during LTPs (MajoHotLTP), blue dots those that were a hotspot equally during HTPs and LTPs (EquaHTPLTP), green dots those that were never a hotspot (NeverHot), brown dots those that were a hotspot only during HTPs (OnlyHotHTP), and black dots those that were a hotspot only during LTPs (OnlyHotLTP)