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Bridging the gap: Using reservoir ecology and human serosurveys to estimate Lassa virus incidence in West Africa

Authors :
Paul E. Gessler
Brian H. Bird
Elisabeth Fichet-Calvet
Christopher H. Remien
Nathan C Layman
Bruno M Ghersi
Peter A. Barry
Andrew J. Basinski
Corina Monagin
Scott L. Nuismer
Tanner J. Varrelman
Michael A. Jarvis
David J. Wolking
Anna R Sjodin
Wesolowski, Amy
Source :
PLoS Computational Biology, Vol 17, Iss 3, p e1008811 (2021), PLoS computational biology, vol 17, iss 3, PLoS Computational Biology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Forecasting the risk of pathogen spillover from reservoir populations of wild or domestic animals is essential for the effective deployment of interventions such as wildlife vaccination or culling. Due to the sporadic nature of spillover events and limited availability of data, developing and validating robust, spatially explicit, predictions is challenging. Recent efforts have begun to make progress in this direction by capitalizing on machine learning methodologies. An important weakness of existing approaches, however, is that they generally rely on combining human and reservoir infection data during the training process and thus conflate risk attributable to the prevalence of the pathogen in the reservoir population with the risk attributed to the realized rate of spillover into the human population. Because effective planning of interventions requires that these components of risk be disentangled, we developed a multi-layer machine learning framework that separates these processes. Our approach begins by training models to predict the geographic range of the primary reservoir and the subset of this range in which the pathogen occurs. The spillover risk predicted by the product of these reservoir specific models is then fit to data on realized patterns of historical spillover into the human population. The result is a geographically specific spillover risk forecast that can be easily decomposed and used to guide effective intervention. Applying our method to Lassa virus, a zoonotic pathogen that regularly spills over into the human population across West Africa, results in a model that explains a modest but statistically significant portion of geographic variation in historical patterns of spillover. When combined with a mechanistic mathematical model of infection dynamics, our spillover risk model predicts that 897,700 humans are infected by Lassa virus each year across West Africa, with Nigeria accounting for more than half of these human infections.<br />Author summary The 2019 emergence of SARS-CoV-2 is a grim reminder of the threat animal-borne pathogens pose to human health. Even prior to SARS-CoV-2, the spillover of pathogens from animal reservoirs was a persistent problem, with pathogens such as Ebola, Nipah, and Lassa regularly but unpredictably causing outbreaks. Machine-learning models that anticipate when and where pathogen transmission from animals to humans is likely to occur would help guide surveillance efforts and preemptive countermeasures like information campaigns or vaccination programs. We develop a novel machine learning framework that uses datasets describing the distribution of a virus within its host and the range of its animal host, along with data on spatial patterns of human immunity, to infer rates of animal-to-human transmission across a region. By training the model on data from the animal host alone, our framework allows rigorous validation of spillover predictions using human data. We apply our framework to Lassa fever, a viral disease of West Africa that is spread to humans by rodents, and use the predictions to update estimates of Lassa virus infections in humans. Our results suggest that Nigeria is most at risk for the emergence of Lassa virus, and should be prioritized for outbreak-surveillance.

Subjects

Subjects :
Epidemiology
Distribution (economics)
Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
Biochemistry
law.invention
0302 clinical medicine
Spillover effect
Models
2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment
Aetiology
Biology (General)
Lassa fever
Mammals
education.field_of_study
Eukaryota
Transmission (mechanics)
Geography
Computational Theory and Mathematics
Medical Microbiology
Viral Pathogens
Modeling and Simulation
Infection
Western
Bioinformatics
QH301-705.5
Immunology
Wildlife
Nigeria
Rodentia
Conventional wisdom
Microbiology
Sierra Leone
03 medical and health sciences
Lassa Fever
Clinical Research
Genetics
Humans
Lassa virus
education
Microbial Pathogens
Molecular Biology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Models, Statistical
Prevention
Organisms
Biology and Life Sciences
Proteins
Computational Biology
Biological
medicine.disease
Arenaviruses
030104 developmental biology
Africa
Guinea
RNA viruses
0301 basic medicine
Physiology
Natural resource economics
viruses
Culling
medicine.disease_cause
Mathematical Sciences
Geographical Locations
Machine Learning
law
Immune Physiology
Medicine and Health Sciences
Immune System Proteins
Ecology
Statistical
Biological Sciences
Africa, Western
Infectious Diseases
Vertebrates
Viruses
Pathogens
Research Article
Risk
Ecology (disciplines)
030231 tropical medicine
Population
Wild
Animals, Wild
Models, Biological
Rodents
Antibodies
Sierra leone
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
Information and Computing Sciences
Development economics
medicine
Animals
Disease Reservoirs
business.industry
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Medical Risk Factors
Amniotes
People and Places
business
Zoology

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS Computational Biology, Vol 17, Iss 3, p e1008811 (2021), PLoS computational biology, vol 17, iss 3, PLoS Computational Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....55c4a0820c4b59875a71442a205d6e80
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.03.05.979658