Wed11 Apr03:00pm(15 mins)
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Where:
Stream 4 - Edward Llwyd 0.01
Speaker:
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Methods We use an individual-based version of our model, EPIONCHO-IBM, which tracks individual humans and accounts for the age-structure of adult worms and microfilariae, allowing for senescence in parasite mortality and fecundity. In line with deterministic EPIONCHO, we account for various density-dependent processes in parasite establishment and vector survival. The goal of this work is to explore how existing data on the relationship between infection prevalence and vector biting rate can be used to incorporate exposure heterogeneity into EPIONCHO-IBM, and explore how this can influence trends in (parasitological, serological and entomological) markers of infection following long-term ivermectin treatment as well as the dynamics of recrudescence after treatment cessation.
Results and Conclusions
Individual host variation in exposure to vectors is a crucial determinant of epidemiological dynamics during and after the treatment phase of a programme. Analyses of prevalence-vector biting rate data indicate that strong heterogeneity is necessary to stabilise low levels of infection prevalence. Levels of worm overdispersion were in broad agreement with those of other studies using different types of (parasitological) data and more severe than values used by other models predicting the probability of elimination. Areas of low pre-intervention prevalence and high exposure heterogeneity may experience infection recrudescence faster than areas of high pre-intervention prevalence but low exposure heterogeneity, for a given MDA duration and coverage. There is a pressing need to identify, gather, and analyse data on distributions of infection in host populations and their determinants (e.g. proximity to vector breeding sites, behavioural, occupational, immunological factors), to better parameterise parasite transmission and control/elimination models.