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Climate, human behaviour or environment: individual-based modelling of Campylobacter seasonality and strategies to reduce disease burden

BACKGROUND: With over 800 million cases globally, campylobacteriosis is a major cause of food borne disease. In temperate climates incidence is highly seasonal but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood, making human disease control difficult. We hypothesised that observed disease patterns...

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Autores principales: Rushton, Stephen P., Sanderson, Roy A., Diggle, Peter J., Shirley, Mark D. F., Blain, Alasdair P., Lake, Iain, Maas, James A., Reid, William D. K., Hardstaff, Jo, Williams, Nicola, Jones, Natalia R., Rigby, Daniel, Strachan, Norval J. C., Forbes, Ken J., Hunter, Paul R., Humphrey, Thomas J., O’Brien, Sarah J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6341592/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30665426
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12967-019-1781-y
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author Rushton, Stephen P.
Sanderson, Roy A.
Diggle, Peter J.
Shirley, Mark D. F.
Blain, Alasdair P.
Lake, Iain
Maas, James A.
Reid, William D. K.
Hardstaff, Jo
Williams, Nicola
Jones, Natalia R.
Rigby, Daniel
Strachan, Norval J. C.
Forbes, Ken J.
Hunter, Paul R.
Humphrey, Thomas J.
O’Brien, Sarah J.
author_facet Rushton, Stephen P.
Sanderson, Roy A.
Diggle, Peter J.
Shirley, Mark D. F.
Blain, Alasdair P.
Lake, Iain
Maas, James A.
Reid, William D. K.
Hardstaff, Jo
Williams, Nicola
Jones, Natalia R.
Rigby, Daniel
Strachan, Norval J. C.
Forbes, Ken J.
Hunter, Paul R.
Humphrey, Thomas J.
O’Brien, Sarah J.
author_sort Rushton, Stephen P.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: With over 800 million cases globally, campylobacteriosis is a major cause of food borne disease. In temperate climates incidence is highly seasonal but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood, making human disease control difficult. We hypothesised that observed disease patterns reflect complex interactions between weather, patterns of human risk behaviour, immune status and level of food contamination. Only by understanding these can we find effective interventions. METHODS: We analysed trends in human Campylobacter cases in NE England from 2004 to 2009, investigating the associations between different risk factors and disease using time-series models. We then developed an individual-based (IB) model of risk behaviour, human immunological responses to infection and environmental contamination driven by weather and land use. We parameterised the IB model for NE England and compared outputs to observed numbers of reported cases each month in the population in 2004–2009. Finally, we used it to investigate different community level disease reduction strategies. RESULTS: Risk behaviours like countryside visits (t = 3.665, P < 0.001 and t = − 2.187, P = 0.029 for temperature and rainfall respectively), and consumption of barbecued food were strongly associated with weather, (t = 3.219, P = 0.002 and t = 2.015, P = 0.045 for weekly average temperature and average maximum temperature respectively) and also rain (t = 2.254, P = 0.02527). This suggests that the effect of weather was indirect, acting through changes in risk behaviour. The seasonal pattern of cases predicted by the IB model was significantly related to observed patterns (r = 0.72, P < 0.001) indicating that simulating risk behaviour could produce the observed seasonal patterns of cases. A vaccination strategy providing short-term immunity was more effective than educational interventions to modify human risk behaviour. Extending immunity to 1 year from 20 days reduced disease burden by an order of magnitude (from 2412–2414 to 203–309 cases per 50,000 person-years). CONCLUSIONS: This is the first interdisciplinary study to integrate environment, risk behaviour, socio-demographics and immunology to model Campylobacter infection, including pathways to mitigation. We conclude that vaccination is likely to be the best route for intervening against campylobacteriosis despite the technical problems associated with understanding both the underlying human immunology and genetic variation in the pathogen, and the likely cost of vaccine development.
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spelling pubmed-63415922019-01-24 Climate, human behaviour or environment: individual-based modelling of Campylobacter seasonality and strategies to reduce disease burden Rushton, Stephen P. Sanderson, Roy A. Diggle, Peter J. Shirley, Mark D. F. Blain, Alasdair P. Lake, Iain Maas, James A. Reid, William D. K. Hardstaff, Jo Williams, Nicola Jones, Natalia R. Rigby, Daniel Strachan, Norval J. C. Forbes, Ken J. Hunter, Paul R. Humphrey, Thomas J. O’Brien, Sarah J. J Transl Med Research BACKGROUND: With over 800 million cases globally, campylobacteriosis is a major cause of food borne disease. In temperate climates incidence is highly seasonal but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood, making human disease control difficult. We hypothesised that observed disease patterns reflect complex interactions between weather, patterns of human risk behaviour, immune status and level of food contamination. Only by understanding these can we find effective interventions. METHODS: We analysed trends in human Campylobacter cases in NE England from 2004 to 2009, investigating the associations between different risk factors and disease using time-series models. We then developed an individual-based (IB) model of risk behaviour, human immunological responses to infection and environmental contamination driven by weather and land use. We parameterised the IB model for NE England and compared outputs to observed numbers of reported cases each month in the population in 2004–2009. Finally, we used it to investigate different community level disease reduction strategies. RESULTS: Risk behaviours like countryside visits (t = 3.665, P < 0.001 and t = − 2.187, P = 0.029 for temperature and rainfall respectively), and consumption of barbecued food were strongly associated with weather, (t = 3.219, P = 0.002 and t = 2.015, P = 0.045 for weekly average temperature and average maximum temperature respectively) and also rain (t = 2.254, P = 0.02527). This suggests that the effect of weather was indirect, acting through changes in risk behaviour. The seasonal pattern of cases predicted by the IB model was significantly related to observed patterns (r = 0.72, P < 0.001) indicating that simulating risk behaviour could produce the observed seasonal patterns of cases. A vaccination strategy providing short-term immunity was more effective than educational interventions to modify human risk behaviour. Extending immunity to 1 year from 20 days reduced disease burden by an order of magnitude (from 2412–2414 to 203–309 cases per 50,000 person-years). CONCLUSIONS: This is the first interdisciplinary study to integrate environment, risk behaviour, socio-demographics and immunology to model Campylobacter infection, including pathways to mitigation. We conclude that vaccination is likely to be the best route for intervening against campylobacteriosis despite the technical problems associated with understanding both the underlying human immunology and genetic variation in the pathogen, and the likely cost of vaccine development. BioMed Central 2019-01-21 /pmc/articles/PMC6341592/ /pubmed/30665426 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12967-019-1781-y Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Rushton, Stephen P.
Sanderson, Roy A.
Diggle, Peter J.
Shirley, Mark D. F.
Blain, Alasdair P.
Lake, Iain
Maas, James A.
Reid, William D. K.
Hardstaff, Jo
Williams, Nicola
Jones, Natalia R.
Rigby, Daniel
Strachan, Norval J. C.
Forbes, Ken J.
Hunter, Paul R.
Humphrey, Thomas J.
O’Brien, Sarah J.
Climate, human behaviour or environment: individual-based modelling of Campylobacter seasonality and strategies to reduce disease burden
title Climate, human behaviour or environment: individual-based modelling of Campylobacter seasonality and strategies to reduce disease burden
title_full Climate, human behaviour or environment: individual-based modelling of Campylobacter seasonality and strategies to reduce disease burden
title_fullStr Climate, human behaviour or environment: individual-based modelling of Campylobacter seasonality and strategies to reduce disease burden
title_full_unstemmed Climate, human behaviour or environment: individual-based modelling of Campylobacter seasonality and strategies to reduce disease burden
title_short Climate, human behaviour or environment: individual-based modelling of Campylobacter seasonality and strategies to reduce disease burden
title_sort climate, human behaviour or environment: individual-based modelling of campylobacter seasonality and strategies to reduce disease burden
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6341592/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30665426
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12967-019-1781-y
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