Liu Fengchen, Enanoria Wayne T A, Zipprich Jennifer, Blumberg Seth, Harriman Kathleen, Ackley Sarah F, Wheaton William D, Allpress Justine L, Porco Travis C
Francis I. Proctor Foundation, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2015 May 1;15:447. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-1766-6.
Measles cases continue to occur among susceptible individuals despite the elimination of endemic measles transmission in the United States. Clustering of disease susceptibility can threaten herd immunity and impact the likelihood of disease outbreaks in a highly vaccinated population. Previous studies have examined the role of contact tracing to control infectious diseases among clustered populations, but have not explicitly modeled the public health response using an agent-based model.
We developed an agent-based simulation model of measles transmission using the Framework for Reconstructing Epidemiological Dynamics (FRED) and the Synthetic Population Database maintained by RTI International. The simulation of measles transmission was based on interactions among individuals in different places: households, schools, daycares, workplaces, and neighborhoods. The model simulated different levels of immunity clustering, vaccination coverage, and contact investigations with delays caused by individuals' behaviors and/or the delay in a health department's response. We examined the effects of these characteristics on the probability of uncontrolled measles outbreaks and the outbreak size in 365 days after the introduction of one index case into a synthetic population.
We found that large measles outbreaks can be prevented with contact investigations and moderate contact rates by having (1) a very high vaccination coverage (≥ 95%) with a moderate to low level of immunity clustering (≤ 0.5) for individuals aged less than or equal to 18 years, or (2) a moderate vaccination coverage (85% or 90%) with no immunity clustering for individuals (≤ 18 years of age), a short intervention delay, and a high probability that a contact can be traced. Without contact investigations, measles outbreaks may be prevented by the highest vaccination coverage with no immunity clustering for individuals (≤ 18 years of age) with moderate contact rates; but for the highest contact rates, even the highest coverage with no immunity clustering for individuals (≤ 18 years of age) cannot completely prevent measles outbreaks.
The simulation results demonstrated the importance of vaccination coverage, clustering of immunity, and contact investigations in preventing uncontrolled measles outbreaks.
尽管美国已消除本土麻疹传播,但易感人群中仍有麻疹病例持续出现。疾病易感性的聚集可能威胁群体免疫,并影响高疫苗接种率人群中疾病爆发的可能性。以往研究探讨了接触者追踪在控制聚集人群中传染病方面的作用,但尚未使用基于主体的模型明确模拟公共卫生应对措施。
我们使用重建流行病学动力学框架(FRED)和RTI国际公司维护的合成人口数据库,开发了一个基于主体的麻疹传播模拟模型。麻疹传播模拟基于不同场所(家庭、学校、日托机构、工作场所和社区)个体之间的相互作用。该模型模拟了不同水平的免疫聚集、疫苗接种覆盖率以及因个体行为和/或卫生部门反应延迟导致的接触调查延迟。我们研究了这些特征对引入一例索引病例到合成人群后365天内麻疹爆发失控概率和爆发规模的影响。
我们发现,通过接触调查和适度的接触率,可以预防大规模麻疹爆发,具体措施为:(1)对于18岁及以下个体,疫苗接种覆盖率非常高(≥95%),免疫聚集水平为中低水平(≤0.5);或(2)对于18岁及以下个体,疫苗接种覆盖率适中(85%或90%),无免疫聚集,干预延迟短,且接触者可追踪的概率高。如果没有接触调查,对于接触率适中的情况,通过对18岁及以下个体进行最高疫苗接种覆盖率且无免疫聚集,可能预防麻疹爆发;但对于接触率最高的情况,即使对18岁及以下个体进行最高覆盖率且无免疫聚集,也无法完全预防麻疹爆发。
模拟结果表明疫苗接种覆盖率、免疫聚集和接触调查在预防麻疹爆发失控方面的重要性。