Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics, Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2010 Dec 16;6(12):e1001224. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1001224.
Identifying the major routes of disease transmission and reservoirs of infection are needed to increase our understanding of disease dynamics and improve disease control. Despite this, transmission events are rarely observed directly. Here we had the unique opportunity to study natural transmission of Bordetella bronchiseptica--a directly transmitted respiratory pathogen with a wide mammalian host range, including sporadic infection of humans--within a commercial rabbitry to evaluate the relative effects of sex and age on the transmission dynamics therein. We did this by developing an a priori set of hypotheses outlining how natural B. bronchiseptica infections may be transmitted between rabbits. We discriminated between these hypotheses by using force-of-infection estimates coupled with random effects binomial regression analysis of B. bronchiseptica age-prevalence data from within our rabbit population. Force-of-infection analysis allowed us to quantify the apparent prevalence of B. bronchiseptica while correcting for age structure. To determine whether transmission is largely within social groups (in this case litter), or from an external group, we used random-effect binomial regression to evaluate the importance of social mixing in disease spread. Between these two approaches our results support young weanlings--as opposed to, for example, breeder or maternal cohorts--as the age cohort primarily responsible for B. bronchiseptica transmission. Thus age-prevalence data, which is relatively easy to gather in clinical or agricultural settings, can be used to evaluate contact patterns and infer the likely age-cohort responsible for transmission of directly transmitted infections. These insights shed light on the dynamics of disease spread and allow an assessment to be made of the best methods for effective long-term disease control.
确定疾病传播的主要途径和感染源对于增加我们对疾病动态的理解和改善疾病控制非常重要。尽管如此,我们很少有机会直接观察到传播事件。在这里,我们有机会在一个商业兔场中研究博德特氏菌(一种直接传播的呼吸道病原体,宿主范围广泛,包括人类的偶发感染)的自然传播,以评估性别和年龄对传播动态的相对影响。我们通过制定一套关于自然博德特氏菌感染如何在兔子之间传播的假设来实现这一目标。我们通过使用感染力估计值和兔子群体内博德特氏菌年龄流行数据的随机效应二项式回归分析来区分这些假设。感染力分析使我们能够量化博德特氏菌的明显流行率,同时纠正年龄结构。为了确定传播是否主要在社会群体(在这种情况下是窝)内进行,或者是否来自外部群体,我们使用随机效应二项式回归来评估社会混合在疾病传播中的重要性。通过这两种方法,我们的结果支持幼兔(例如,而非繁殖者或母兔群体)是博德特氏菌传播的主要年龄群体。因此,相对容易在临床或农业环境中收集的年龄流行数据可用于评估接触模式并推断出可能负责直接传播感染传播的年龄群体。这些见解揭示了疾病传播的动态,并允许评估有效长期疾病控制的最佳方法。