Avia-GIS, Zoersel, Belgium.
Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean, World Health Organisation, Cairo, Egypt.
Int J Health Geogr. 2018 Feb 14;17(1):4. doi: 10.1186/s12942-018-0125-0.
Aedes-borne diseases as dengue, zika, chikungunya and yellow fever are an emerging problem worldwide, being transmitted by Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. Lack of up to date information about the distribution of Aedes species hampers surveillance and control. Global databases have been compiled but these did not capture data in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR), and any models built using these datasets fail to identify highly suitable areas where one or both species may occur. The first objective of this study was therefore to update the existing Ae. aegypti (Linnaeus, 1762) and Ae. albopictus (Skuse, 1895) compendia and the second objective was to generate species distribution models targeted to the EMR. A final objective was to engage the WHO points of contacts within the region to provide feedback and hence validate all model outputs.
The Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus compendia provided by Kraemer et al. (Sci Data 2:150035, 2015; Dryad Digit Repos, 2015) were used as starting points. These datasets were extended with more recent species and disease data. In the next step, these sets were filtered using the Köppen-Geiger classification and the Mahalanobis distance. The occurrence data were supplemented with pseudo-absence data as input to Random Forests. The resulting suitability and maximum risk of establishment maps were combined into hard-classified maps per country for expert validation.
The EMR datasets consisted of 1995 presence locations for Ae. aegypti and 2868 presence locations for Ae. albopictus. The resulting suitability maps indicated that there exist areas with high suitability and/or maximum risk of establishment for these disease vectors in contrast with previous model output. Precipitation and host availability, expressed as population density and night-time lights, were the most important variables for Ae. aegypti. Host availability was the most important predictor in case of Ae. albopictus. Internal validation was assessed geographically. External validation showed high agreement between the predicted maps and the experts' extensive knowledge of the terrain.
Maps of distribution and maximum risk of establishment were created for Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus for the WHO EMR. These region-specific maps highlighted data gaps and these gaps will be filled using targeted monitoring and surveillance. This will increase the awareness and preparedness of the different countries for Aedes borne diseases.
登革热、寨卡病毒、基孔肯雅热和黄热病等由埃及伊蚊和白纹伊蚊传播的虫媒病毒疾病是全球正在出现的问题。缺乏有关埃及伊蚊和白纹伊蚊分布的最新信息,这阻碍了监测和控制工作。已经编制了全球数据库,但这些数据库没有捕获世界卫生组织东地中海区域(EMR)的数据,并且使用这些数据集构建的任何模型都无法确定一个或两个物种可能存在的高度适宜地区。因此,这项研究的第一个目标是更新现有的埃及伊蚊(Linnaeus,1762)和白纹伊蚊(Skuse,1895)汇编,第二个目标是生成针对 EMR 的物种分布模型。最后一个目标是让该区域的世卫组织联络点提供反馈,从而验证所有模型输出。
使用 Kraemer 等人提供的埃及伊蚊和白纹伊蚊汇编(Sci Data 2:150035, 2015; Dryad Digit Repos, 2015)作为起点。这些数据集通过最近的物种和疾病数据进行了扩展。在下一个步骤中,使用柯本-盖格尔分类和马哈拉诺比斯距离对这些数据集进行了筛选。将出现数据与伪缺失数据一起补充为随机森林的输入。将由此产生的适宜性和最大建立风险图合并为每个国家的硬分类图,供专家验证。
EMR 数据集包括 1995 个埃及伊蚊存在地点和 2868 个白纹伊蚊存在地点。结果表明,与以前的模型输出相比,这些疾病载体存在高度适宜和/或最大建立风险的地区。降水和宿主可用性(表示为人口密度和夜间灯光)是埃及伊蚊最重要的变量。在白纹伊蚊的情况下,宿主可用性是最重要的预测因素。通过地理区域评估了内部验证。外部验证表明,预测图与专家对地形的广泛了解之间具有很高的一致性。
为世界卫生组织东地中海区域创建了埃及伊蚊和白纹伊蚊的分布和最大建立风险图。这些特定区域的地图突出了数据空白,这些空白将通过有针对性的监测和监测来填补。这将提高不同国家对埃及伊蚊传播疾病的认识和准备。