Department of Animal Ecology and Systematics, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2013 Jul 25;7(7):e2327. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002327. Print 2013.
Schistosomiasis japonica is a major parasitic disease threatening millions of people in China. Though overall prevalence was greatly reduced during the second half of the past century, continued persistence in some areas and cases of re-emergence in others remain major concerns. As many regions in China are approaching disease elimination, obtaining quantitative data on Schistosoma japonicum parasites is increasingly difficult. This study examines the distribution of schistosomiasis in eastern China, taking advantage of the fact that the single intermediate host serves as a major transmission bottleneck. Epidemiological, population-genetic and high-resolution ecological data are combined to construct a predictive model capable of estimating the probability that schistosomiasis occurs in a target area ("spatially explicit schistosomiasis risk"). Results show that intermediate host genetic parameters are correlated with the distribution of endemic disease areas, and that five explanatory variables--altitude, minimum temperature, annual precipitation, genetic distance, and haplotype diversity-discriminate between endemic and non-endemic zones. Model predictions are correlated with human infection rates observed at the county level. Visualization of the model indicates that the highest risks of disease occur in the Dongting and Poyang lake regions, as expected, as well as in some floodplain areas of the Yangtze River. High risk areas are interconnected, suggesting the complex hydrological interplay of Dongting and Poyang lakes with the Yangtze River may be important for maintaining schistosomiasis in eastern China. Results demonstrate the value of genetic parameters for risk modeling, and particularly for reducing model prediction error. The findings have important consequences both for understanding the determinants of the current distribution of S. japonicum infections, and for designing future schistosomiasis surveillance and control strategies. The results also highlight how genetic information on taxa that constitute bottlenecks to disease transmission can be of value for risk modeling.
日本血吸虫病是一种严重威胁中国数百万人健康的寄生虫病。尽管在上世纪后半叶,全国的总体流行率已大幅下降,但在一些地区仍持续存在,在另一些地区则有重新出现的情况,这仍是主要关注点。随着中国许多地区接近消除疾病,获取日本血吸虫寄生虫的定量数据变得越来越困难。本研究利用单一中间宿主作为主要传播瓶颈这一事实,研究了华东地区的血吸虫病分布情况。结合流行病学、种群遗传学和高分辨率生态数据,构建了一个能够估计目标地区血吸虫病发生概率的预测模型(“空间明确的血吸虫病风险”)。结果表明,中间宿主的遗传参数与流行地区的分布相关,海拔、最低温度、年降水量、遗传距离和单倍型多样性等五个解释变量可以区分流行区和非流行区。模型预测与县级观察到的人类感染率相关。模型可视化表明,预计洞庭湖和鄱阳湖地区以及长江一些泛滥平原地区的疾病风险最高,高风险地区相互连接,这表明洞庭湖和鄱阳湖与长江的复杂水文相互作用可能对维持中国东部的血吸虫病很重要。研究结果证明了遗传参数在风险建模中的价值,特别是在降低模型预测误差方面。这些发现对于理解当前日本血吸虫病感染分布的决定因素以及设计未来的血吸虫病监测和控制策略具有重要意义。研究结果还强调了构成疾病传播瓶颈的类群的遗传信息如何对风险建模具有价值。