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Fine Scale Spatiotemporal Clustering of Dengue Virus Transmission in Children and Aedes aegypti in Rural Thai Villages

BACKGROUND: Based on spatiotemporal clustering of human dengue virus (DENV) infections, transmission is thought to occur at fine spatiotemporal scales by horizontal transfer of virus between humans and mosquito vectors. To define the dimensions of local transmission and quantify the factors that sup...

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Autores principales: Yoon, In-Kyu, Getis, Arthur, Aldstadt, Jared, Rothman, Alan L., Tannitisupawong, Darunee, Koenraadt, Constantianus J. M., Fansiri, Thanyalak, Jones, James W., Morrison, Amy C., Jarman, Richard G., Nisalak, Ananda, Mammen, Mammen P., Thammapalo, Suwich, Srikiatkhachorn, Anon, Green, Sharone, Libraty, Daniel H., Gibbons, Robert V., Endy, Timothy, Pimgate, Chusak, Scott, Thomas W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3398976/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22816001
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001730
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author Yoon, In-Kyu
Getis, Arthur
Aldstadt, Jared
Rothman, Alan L.
Tannitisupawong, Darunee
Koenraadt, Constantianus J. M.
Fansiri, Thanyalak
Jones, James W.
Morrison, Amy C.
Jarman, Richard G.
Nisalak, Ananda
Mammen, Mammen P.
Thammapalo, Suwich
Srikiatkhachorn, Anon
Green, Sharone
Libraty, Daniel H.
Gibbons, Robert V.
Endy, Timothy
Pimgate, Chusak
Scott, Thomas W.
author_facet Yoon, In-Kyu
Getis, Arthur
Aldstadt, Jared
Rothman, Alan L.
Tannitisupawong, Darunee
Koenraadt, Constantianus J. M.
Fansiri, Thanyalak
Jones, James W.
Morrison, Amy C.
Jarman, Richard G.
Nisalak, Ananda
Mammen, Mammen P.
Thammapalo, Suwich
Srikiatkhachorn, Anon
Green, Sharone
Libraty, Daniel H.
Gibbons, Robert V.
Endy, Timothy
Pimgate, Chusak
Scott, Thomas W.
author_sort Yoon, In-Kyu
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Based on spatiotemporal clustering of human dengue virus (DENV) infections, transmission is thought to occur at fine spatiotemporal scales by horizontal transfer of virus between humans and mosquito vectors. To define the dimensions of local transmission and quantify the factors that support it, we examined relationships between infected humans and Aedes aegypti in Thai villages. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Geographic cluster investigations of 100-meter radius were conducted around DENV-positive and DENV-negative febrile “index” cases (positive and negative clusters, respectively) from a longitudinal cohort study in rural Thailand. Child contacts and Ae. aegypti from cluster houses were assessed for DENV infection. Spatiotemporal, demographic, and entomological parameters were evaluated. In positive clusters, the DENV infection rate among child contacts was 35.3% in index houses, 29.9% in houses within 20 meters, and decreased with distance from the index house to 6.2% in houses 80–100 meters away (p<0.001). Significantly more Ae. aegypti were DENV-infectious (i.e., DENV-positive in head/thorax) in positive clusters (23/1755; 1.3%) than negative clusters (1/1548; 0.1%). In positive clusters, 8.2% of mosquitoes were DENV-infectious in index houses, 4.2% in other houses with DENV-infected children, and 0.4% in houses without infected children (p<0.001). The DENV infection rate in contacts was 47.4% in houses with infectious mosquitoes, 28.7% in other houses in the same cluster, and 10.8% in positive clusters without infectious mosquitoes (p<0.001). Ae. aegypti pupae and adult females were more numerous only in houses containing infectious mosquitoes. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Human and mosquito infections are positively associated at the level of individual houses and neighboring residences. Certain houses with high transmission risk contribute disproportionately to DENV spread to neighboring houses. Small groups of houses with elevated transmission risk are consistent with over-dispersion of transmission (i.e., at a given point in time, people/mosquitoes from a small portion of houses are responsible for the majority of transmission).
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spelling pubmed-33989762012-07-19 Fine Scale Spatiotemporal Clustering of Dengue Virus Transmission in Children and Aedes aegypti in Rural Thai Villages Yoon, In-Kyu Getis, Arthur Aldstadt, Jared Rothman, Alan L. Tannitisupawong, Darunee Koenraadt, Constantianus J. M. Fansiri, Thanyalak Jones, James W. Morrison, Amy C. Jarman, Richard G. Nisalak, Ananda Mammen, Mammen P. Thammapalo, Suwich Srikiatkhachorn, Anon Green, Sharone Libraty, Daniel H. Gibbons, Robert V. Endy, Timothy Pimgate, Chusak Scott, Thomas W. PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Based on spatiotemporal clustering of human dengue virus (DENV) infections, transmission is thought to occur at fine spatiotemporal scales by horizontal transfer of virus between humans and mosquito vectors. To define the dimensions of local transmission and quantify the factors that support it, we examined relationships between infected humans and Aedes aegypti in Thai villages. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Geographic cluster investigations of 100-meter radius were conducted around DENV-positive and DENV-negative febrile “index” cases (positive and negative clusters, respectively) from a longitudinal cohort study in rural Thailand. Child contacts and Ae. aegypti from cluster houses were assessed for DENV infection. Spatiotemporal, demographic, and entomological parameters were evaluated. In positive clusters, the DENV infection rate among child contacts was 35.3% in index houses, 29.9% in houses within 20 meters, and decreased with distance from the index house to 6.2% in houses 80–100 meters away (p<0.001). Significantly more Ae. aegypti were DENV-infectious (i.e., DENV-positive in head/thorax) in positive clusters (23/1755; 1.3%) than negative clusters (1/1548; 0.1%). In positive clusters, 8.2% of mosquitoes were DENV-infectious in index houses, 4.2% in other houses with DENV-infected children, and 0.4% in houses without infected children (p<0.001). The DENV infection rate in contacts was 47.4% in houses with infectious mosquitoes, 28.7% in other houses in the same cluster, and 10.8% in positive clusters without infectious mosquitoes (p<0.001). Ae. aegypti pupae and adult females were more numerous only in houses containing infectious mosquitoes. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Human and mosquito infections are positively associated at the level of individual houses and neighboring residences. Certain houses with high transmission risk contribute disproportionately to DENV spread to neighboring houses. Small groups of houses with elevated transmission risk are consistent with over-dispersion of transmission (i.e., at a given point in time, people/mosquitoes from a small portion of houses are responsible for the majority of transmission). Public Library of Science 2012-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3398976/ /pubmed/22816001 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001730 Text en This is an open-access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yoon, In-Kyu
Getis, Arthur
Aldstadt, Jared
Rothman, Alan L.
Tannitisupawong, Darunee
Koenraadt, Constantianus J. M.
Fansiri, Thanyalak
Jones, James W.
Morrison, Amy C.
Jarman, Richard G.
Nisalak, Ananda
Mammen, Mammen P.
Thammapalo, Suwich
Srikiatkhachorn, Anon
Green, Sharone
Libraty, Daniel H.
Gibbons, Robert V.
Endy, Timothy
Pimgate, Chusak
Scott, Thomas W.
Fine Scale Spatiotemporal Clustering of Dengue Virus Transmission in Children and Aedes aegypti in Rural Thai Villages
title Fine Scale Spatiotemporal Clustering of Dengue Virus Transmission in Children and Aedes aegypti in Rural Thai Villages
title_full Fine Scale Spatiotemporal Clustering of Dengue Virus Transmission in Children and Aedes aegypti in Rural Thai Villages
title_fullStr Fine Scale Spatiotemporal Clustering of Dengue Virus Transmission in Children and Aedes aegypti in Rural Thai Villages
title_full_unstemmed Fine Scale Spatiotemporal Clustering of Dengue Virus Transmission in Children and Aedes aegypti in Rural Thai Villages
title_short Fine Scale Spatiotemporal Clustering of Dengue Virus Transmission in Children and Aedes aegypti in Rural Thai Villages
title_sort fine scale spatiotemporal clustering of dengue virus transmission in children and aedes aegypti in rural thai villages
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3398976/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22816001
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001730
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