Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Marie Bashir Institute for Infectious Diseases and Biosecurity, Charles Perkins Centre, School of Life and Environmental Sciences and Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
PLoS Pathog. 2018 Jan 11;14(1):e1006780. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006780. eCollection 2018 Jan.
The factors that determine the pattern and rate of spread of influenza virus at a continental-scale are uncertain. Although recent work suggests that influenza epidemics in the United States exhibit a strong geographical correlation, the spatiotemporal dynamics of influenza in Australia, a country and continent of approximately similar size and climate complexity but with a far smaller population, are not known. Using a unique combination of large-scale laboratory-confirmed influenza surveillance comprising >450,000 entries and genomic sequence data we determined the local-level spatial diffusion of this important human pathogen nationwide in Australia. We used laboratory-confirmed influenza data to characterize the spread of influenza virus across Australia during 2007-2016. The onset of established epidemics varied across seasons, with highly synchronized epidemics coinciding with the emergence of antigenically distinct viruses, particularly during the 2009 A/H1N1 pandemic. The onset of epidemics was largely synchronized between the most populous cities, even those separated by distances of >3000 km and those that experience vastly diverse climates. In addition, by analyzing global phylogeographic patterns we show that the synchronized dissemination of influenza across Australian cities involved multiple introductions from the global influenza population, coupled with strong domestic connectivity, rather than through the distinct radial patterns of geographic dispersal that are driven by work-flow transmission as observed in the United States. In addition, by comparing the spatial structure of influenza A and B, we found that these viruses tended to occupy different geographic regions, and peak in different seasons, perhaps indicative of moderate cross-protective immunity or viral interference effects. The highly synchronized outbreaks of influenza virus at a continental-scale revealed here highlight the importance of coordinated public health responses in the event of the emergence of a novel, human-to-human transmissible, virus.
在大陆尺度上,决定流感病毒传播模式和速度的因素尚不确定。尽管最近的研究表明,美国的流感流行具有很强的地理相关性,但澳大利亚的流感时空动态(该国面积和气候复杂度与美国相近,但人口要少得多)尚不清楚。利用包含超过 45 万条记录的大规模实验室确诊流感监测的独特组合以及基因组序列数据,我们确定了这种重要的人类病原体在澳大利亚全国范围内的局部空间扩散情况。我们使用实验室确诊的流感数据来描述 2007-2016 年期间澳大利亚境内流感病毒的传播情况。流行的开始在不同季节有所不同,具有高度同步性的流行与抗原不同的病毒的出现同时发生,尤其是在 2009 年 A/H1N1 大流行期间。人口最多的城市之间的流行开始基本同步,即使这些城市之间相隔 3000 公里以上,且气候差异极大。此外,通过分析全球系统地理学模式,我们表明,流感在澳大利亚城市中的同步传播涉及来自全球流感人群的多次传入,加上强大的国内连接性,而不是通过在美国观察到的由工作流程传播驱动的独特的放射状地理扩散模式。此外,通过比较流感 A 型和 B 型的空间结构,我们发现这些病毒往往占据不同的地理区域,并且在不同的季节达到高峰,这可能表明存在适度的交叉保护免疫或病毒干扰效应。这里揭示的流感病毒在大陆尺度上的高度同步爆发突出表明,在出现新型、可在人与人之间传播的病毒时,协调一致的公共卫生应对措施非常重要。