School of Geography and Development, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2011 Apr;119(4):439-45. doi: 10.1289/ehp.1002383. Epub 2010 Nov 19.
Despite the significant disease burden of the influenza virus in humans, our understanding of the basis for its pronounced seasonality remains incomplete. Past observations that influenza epidemics occur in the winter across temperate climates, combined with insufficient knowledge about the epidemiology of influenza in the tropics, led to the perception that cool and dry conditions were a necessary, and possibly sufficient, driver of influenza epidemics. Recent reports of substantial levels of influenza virus activity and well-defined seasonality in tropical regions, where warm and humid conditions often persist year-round, have rendered previous hypotheses insufficient for explaining global patterns of influenza.
In this review, we examined the scientific evidence for the seasonal mechanisms that potentially explain the complex seasonal patterns of influenza disease activity observed globally.
In this review we assessed the strength of a range of hypotheses that attempt to explain observations of influenza seasonality across different latitudes and how they relate to each other. We reviewed studies describing population-scale observations, mathematical models, and ecological, laboratory, and clinical experiments pertaining to influenza seasonality. The literature review includes studies that directly mention the topic of influenza seasonality, as well as other topics we believed to be relevant. We also developed an analytical framework that highlights the complex interactions among environmental stimuli, mediating mechanisms, and the seasonal timing of influenza epidemics and identify critical areas for further research.
The central questions in influenza seasonality remain unresolved. Future research is particularly needed in tropical localities, where our understanding of seasonality remains poor, and will require a combination of experimental and observational studies. Further understanding of the environmental factors that drive influenza circulation also may be useful to predict how dynamics will be affected at regional levels by global climate change.
尽管流感病毒给人类带来了巨大的疾病负担,但我们对其明显季节性的基础仍了解不足。过去的观察结果表明,流感在温带气候中会在冬季流行,再加上对热带地区流感流行病学的了解不足,这导致人们认为凉爽和干燥的条件是流感流行的必要条件,甚至可能是充分条件。最近有报道称,在温暖潮湿的条件常年存在的热带地区,流感病毒的活动水平和明确的季节性都很高,这使得以前的假设不足以解释全球流感模式。
在这篇综述中,我们研究了潜在解释全球流感疾病活动复杂季节性模式的季节性机制的科学证据。
在这篇综述中,我们评估了一系列试图解释不同纬度观察到的流感季节性的假设的强度,以及它们之间的相互关系。我们回顾了描述人群规模观察、数学模型以及与流感季节性相关的生态、实验室和临床实验的研究。文献综述包括直接提及流感季节性主题的研究,以及我们认为相关的其他主题。我们还开发了一个分析框架,突出了环境刺激、介导机制以及流感流行的季节性时间之间的复杂相互作用,并确定了进一步研究的关键领域。
流感季节性的核心问题仍未解决。在热带地区,我们对季节性的了解仍然很差,因此特别需要进行未来的研究,这需要结合实验和观察研究。进一步了解驱动流感传播的环境因素也可能有助于预测全球气候变化如何影响区域水平的动态。