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Development of a dose-response model for porcine cysticercosis

Taenia solium is an important cause of acquired epilepsy worldwide and remains endemic in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Transmission of this parasite is still poorly understood despite the design of infection experiments to improve our knowledge of the disease, with estimates for critical epidemi...

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Autores principales: Andrade-Mogrovejo, Daniel A., Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy, Ho-Palma, Ana C., Prada, Joaquín M., Bonnet, Gabrielle, Pizzitutti, Francesco, Gomez-Puerta, Luis A., Arroyo, Gianfranco, O’Neal, Seth E., Garcia, Hector H., Guitian, Javier, Gonzalez, Armando
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8920259/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35286329
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0264898
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author Andrade-Mogrovejo, Daniel A.
Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy
Ho-Palma, Ana C.
Prada, Joaquín M.
Bonnet, Gabrielle
Pizzitutti, Francesco
Gomez-Puerta, Luis A.
Arroyo, Gianfranco
O’Neal, Seth E.
Garcia, Hector H.
Guitian, Javier
Gonzalez, Armando
author_facet Andrade-Mogrovejo, Daniel A.
Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy
Ho-Palma, Ana C.
Prada, Joaquín M.
Bonnet, Gabrielle
Pizzitutti, Francesco
Gomez-Puerta, Luis A.
Arroyo, Gianfranco
O’Neal, Seth E.
Garcia, Hector H.
Guitian, Javier
Gonzalez, Armando
author_sort Andrade-Mogrovejo, Daniel A.
collection PubMed
description Taenia solium is an important cause of acquired epilepsy worldwide and remains endemic in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Transmission of this parasite is still poorly understood despite the design of infection experiments to improve our knowledge of the disease, with estimates for critical epidemiological parameters, such as the probability of human-to-pig infection after exposure to eggs, still lacking. In this paper, a systematic review was carried out and eight pig infection experiments were analyzed to describe the probability of developing cysts. These experiments included different pathways of inoculation: with ingestion of proglottids, eggs, and beetles that ingested eggs, and direct injection of activated oncospheres into the carotid artery. In these experiments, different infective doses were used, and the numbers of viable and degenerated cysts in the body and brain of each pig were registered. Five alternative dose-response models (exponential, logistic, log-logistic, and exact and approximate beta-Poisson) were assessed for their accuracy in describing the observed probabilities of cyst development as a function of the inoculation dose. Dose-response models were developed separately for the presence of three types of cysts (any, viable only, and cysts in the brain) and considered for each of the four inoculation methods (“Proglottids”, “Eggs”, “Beetles” and “Carotid”). The exact beta-Poisson model best fit the data for the three types of cysts and all relevant exposure pathways. However, observations for some exposure pathways were too scarce to reliably define a dose-response curve with any model. A wide enough range of doses and sufficient sample sizes was only found for the “Eggs” pathway and a merged “Oral” pathway combining the “Proglottids”, “Eggs” and “Beetles” pathways. Estimated parameter values from this model suggest that a low infective dose is sufficient to result in a 50% probability for the development of any cyst or for viable cyst infections. Although this is a preliminary model reliant on a limited dataset, the parameters described in this manuscript should contribute to the design of future experimental infections related to T. solium transmission, as well as the parameterization of simulation models of transmission aimed at informing control.
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spelling pubmed-89202592022-03-15 Development of a dose-response model for porcine cysticercosis Andrade-Mogrovejo, Daniel A. Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy Ho-Palma, Ana C. Prada, Joaquín M. Bonnet, Gabrielle Pizzitutti, Francesco Gomez-Puerta, Luis A. Arroyo, Gianfranco O’Neal, Seth E. Garcia, Hector H. Guitian, Javier Gonzalez, Armando PLoS One Research Article Taenia solium is an important cause of acquired epilepsy worldwide and remains endemic in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Transmission of this parasite is still poorly understood despite the design of infection experiments to improve our knowledge of the disease, with estimates for critical epidemiological parameters, such as the probability of human-to-pig infection after exposure to eggs, still lacking. In this paper, a systematic review was carried out and eight pig infection experiments were analyzed to describe the probability of developing cysts. These experiments included different pathways of inoculation: with ingestion of proglottids, eggs, and beetles that ingested eggs, and direct injection of activated oncospheres into the carotid artery. In these experiments, different infective doses were used, and the numbers of viable and degenerated cysts in the body and brain of each pig were registered. Five alternative dose-response models (exponential, logistic, log-logistic, and exact and approximate beta-Poisson) were assessed for their accuracy in describing the observed probabilities of cyst development as a function of the inoculation dose. Dose-response models were developed separately for the presence of three types of cysts (any, viable only, and cysts in the brain) and considered for each of the four inoculation methods (“Proglottids”, “Eggs”, “Beetles” and “Carotid”). The exact beta-Poisson model best fit the data for the three types of cysts and all relevant exposure pathways. However, observations for some exposure pathways were too scarce to reliably define a dose-response curve with any model. A wide enough range of doses and sufficient sample sizes was only found for the “Eggs” pathway and a merged “Oral” pathway combining the “Proglottids”, “Eggs” and “Beetles” pathways. Estimated parameter values from this model suggest that a low infective dose is sufficient to result in a 50% probability for the development of any cyst or for viable cyst infections. Although this is a preliminary model reliant on a limited dataset, the parameters described in this manuscript should contribute to the design of future experimental infections related to T. solium transmission, as well as the parameterization of simulation models of transmission aimed at informing control. Public Library of Science 2022-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8920259/ /pubmed/35286329 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0264898 Text en © 2022 Andrade-Mogrovejo et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Andrade-Mogrovejo, Daniel A.
Gonzales-Gustavson, Eloy
Ho-Palma, Ana C.
Prada, Joaquín M.
Bonnet, Gabrielle
Pizzitutti, Francesco
Gomez-Puerta, Luis A.
Arroyo, Gianfranco
O’Neal, Seth E.
Garcia, Hector H.
Guitian, Javier
Gonzalez, Armando
Development of a dose-response model for porcine cysticercosis
title Development of a dose-response model for porcine cysticercosis
title_full Development of a dose-response model for porcine cysticercosis
title_fullStr Development of a dose-response model for porcine cysticercosis
title_full_unstemmed Development of a dose-response model for porcine cysticercosis
title_short Development of a dose-response model for porcine cysticercosis
title_sort development of a dose-response model for porcine cysticercosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8920259/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35286329
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0264898
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