From the Department of Epidemiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Division of Viral Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
Epidemiology. 2021 May 1;32(3):351-359. doi: 10.1097/EDE.0000000000001322.
Norovirus outbreaks are notoriously explosive, with dramatic symptomology and rapid disease spread. Children are particularly vulnerable to infection and drive norovirus transmission due to their high contact rates with each other and the environment. Despite the explosive nature of norovirus outbreaks, attack rates in schools and daycares remain low with the majority of students not reporting symptoms.
We explore immunologic and epidemiologic mechanisms that may underlie epidemic norovirus transmission dynamics using a disease transmission model. Towards this end, we compared different model scenarios, including innate resistance and acquired immunity (collectively denoted 'immunity'), stochastic extinction, and an individual exclusion intervention. We calibrated our model to daycare and school outbreaks from national surveillance data.
Including immunity in the model led to attack rates that were consistent with the data. However, immunity alone resulted in the majority of outbreak durations being relatively short. The addition of individual exclusion (to the immunity model) extended outbreak durations by reducing the amount of time that symptomatic people contribute to transmission. Including both immunity and individual exclusion mechanisms resulted in simulations where both attack rates and outbreak durations were consistent with surveillance data.
The epidemiology of norovirus outbreaks in daycare and school settings cannot be well described by a simple transmission model in which all individuals start as fully susceptible. More studies on how best to design interventions which leverage population immunity and encourage more rigorous individual exclusion may improve venue-level control measures. See video abstract at http://links.lww.com/EDE/B795.
诺如病毒爆发极具爆发性,症状明显且疾病传播迅速。儿童特别容易受到感染,由于他们彼此之间以及与环境之间的接触率很高,因此会推动诺如病毒的传播。尽管诺如病毒爆发具有爆发性,但学校和日托机构的发病率仍然很低,大多数学生没有报告症状。
我们使用疾病传播模型来探索可能构成流行诺如病毒传播动力学基础的免疫和流行病学机制。为此,我们比较了不同的模型情景,包括先天抵抗和获得性免疫(统称为“免疫力”)、随机灭绝和个体排除干预。我们根据全国监测数据对日间托儿所和学校爆发进行了模型校准。
在模型中加入免疫力可使发病率与数据一致。但是,仅免疫力会导致大多数爆发持续时间相对较短。个体排除(添加到免疫模型中)通过减少症状患者对传播的贡献时间来延长爆发持续时间。同时包括免疫力和个体排除机制会导致模拟结果中发病率和爆发持续时间与监测数据一致。
日托和学校环境中诺如病毒爆发的流行病学不能仅通过简单的传播模型来很好地描述,因为所有个体都从完全易感染开始。关于如何设计利用人群免疫力并鼓励更严格的个体排除的干预措施的更多研究可能会改善场馆级别的控制措施。请观看视频摘要:http://links.lww.com/EDE/B795。