Williams Paul D, Day Troy
Department of Zoology, University of Toronto, 25 Harbord Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5S 3G5.
Mol Ecol. 2008 Jan;17(1):485-99. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2007.03418.x.
Recent theory has examined the way in which vaccination strategies are expected to influence the evolution of parasite virulence. Most of this work has assumed that vaccination is imposed on a homogeneous host population. However, host populations are typically composed of different types of individuals, with each type responding differently to infection. Moreover, actual interventions often focus treatment on those hosts that are likely to suffer the most ill effects of a particular disease. Here we consider the epidemiological and evolutionary consequences of interventions that focus vaccination on individuals expressing the greatest susceptibility to infection and/or the greatest vulnerability to mortality once infected. Our results indicate that predictions are very sensitive to the nature and degree of heterogeneity in susceptibility and vulnerability. They further suggest that accounting for realistic kinds of heterogeneity when contemplating targeted treatment plans and policies might provide a new tool in the design of more effective virulence management strategies.
近期理论研究了疫苗接种策略有望影响寄生虫毒力进化的方式。这项工作大多假定疫苗接种施加于同质的宿主群体。然而,宿主群体通常由不同类型的个体组成,每种类型个体对感染的反应不同。此外,实际干预措施往往将治疗重点放在那些可能受特定疾病影响最严重的宿主身上。在此,我们考虑将疫苗接种重点放在对感染表现出最大易感性和/或一旦感染对死亡表现出最大脆弱性的个体上的干预措施所产生的流行病学和进化后果。我们的结果表明,预测对易感性和脆弱性的异质性性质和程度非常敏感。结果还表明,在考虑有针对性的治疗计划和政策时,考虑实际的异质性类型可能为设计更有效的毒力管理策略提供一种新工具。