Santos-Vega Mauricio, Bouma Menno J, Kohli Vijay, Pascual Mercedes
Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Chicago, United States of America.
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, University of London, United Kingdom.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2016 Dec 1;10(12):e0005155. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0005155. eCollection 2016 Dec.
The world is rapidly becoming urban with the global population living in cities projected to double by 2050. This increase in urbanization poses new challenges for the spread and control of communicable diseases such as malaria. In particular, urban environments create highly heterogeneous socio-economic and environmental conditions that can affect the transmission of vector-borne diseases dependent on human water storage and waste water management. Interestingly India, as opposed to Africa, harbors a mosquito vector, Anopheles stephensi, which thrives in the man-made environments of cities and acts as the vector for both Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum, making the malaria problem a truly urban phenomenon. Here we address the role and determinants of within-city spatial heterogeneity in the incidence patterns of vivax malaria, and then draw comparisons with results for falciparum malaria.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Statistical analyses and a phenomenological transmission model are applied to an extensive spatio-temporal dataset on cases of Plasmodium vivax in the city of Ahmedabad (Gujarat, India) that spans 12 years monthly at the level of wards. A spatial pattern in malaria incidence is described that is largely stationary in time for this parasite. Malaria risk is then shown to be associated with socioeconomic indicators and environmental parameters, temperature and humidity. In a more dynamical perspective, an Inhomogeneous Markov Chain Model is used to predict vivax malaria risk. Models that account for climate factors, socioeconomic level and population size show the highest predictive skill. A comparison to the transmission dynamics of falciparum malaria reinforces the conclusion that the spatio-temporal patterns of risk are strongly driven by extrinsic factors.
CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Climate forcing and socio-economic heterogeneity act synergistically at local scales on the population dynamics of urban malaria in this city. The stationarity of malaria risk patterns provides a basis for more targeted intervention, such as vector control, based on transmission 'hotspots'. This is especially relevant for P. vivax, a more resilient parasite than P. falciparum, due to its ability to relapse and the operational shortcomings of delivering a "radical cure".
世界正迅速城市化,预计到2050年全球城市人口将翻番。城市化的加剧给疟疾等传染病的传播和控制带来了新挑战。特别是,城市环境造成了高度异质的社会经济和环境条件,这可能影响依赖人类储水和废水管理的病媒传播疾病的传播。有趣的是,与非洲不同,印度存在一种蚊虫媒介——斯氏按蚊,它在城市的人工环境中繁衍,并作为间日疟原虫和恶性疟原虫的传播媒介,使得疟疾问题成为一个真正的城市现象。在此,我们探讨城市内部空间异质性在间日疟发病率模式中的作用和决定因素,然后与恶性疟的结果进行比较。
方法/主要发现:统计分析和现象学传播模型被应用于艾哈迈达巴德市(印度古吉拉特邦)间日疟病例的广泛时空数据集,该数据集涵盖12年,按月在病房层面进行统计。描述了疟疾发病率的空间模式,该模式在时间上对这种寄生虫来说基本是稳定的。然后表明疟疾风险与社会经济指标、环境参数、温度和湿度相关。从更动态的角度来看,使用非齐次马尔可夫链模型来预测间日疟风险。考虑气候因素、社会经济水平和人口规模的模型显示出最高的预测能力。与恶性疟传播动态的比较强化了风险的时空模式受外在因素强烈驱动的结论。
结论/意义:气候强迫和社会经济异质性在当地尺度上对该城市城市疟疾的种群动态起协同作用。疟疾风险模式的稳定性为基于传播“热点”的更有针对性的干预措施(如病媒控制)提供了基础。这对于间日疟尤其重要,因为它比恶性疟更具韧性,这归因于其复发能力以及实现“根治”的操作缺陷。