News and Research
Immune System
Potential For Pathogens To Evolve Missing From Emerging-disease
Models
1-2-2004
With outbreaks of new and frightening infectious diseases
such as SARS and monkey pox jumping from the animal kingdom
to humans, tracking their spread is vital to public health
efforts to contain them. A novel mathematical model now
gives public health leaders another tool to assess the risk
of new infectious disease emergence that emphasizes the
potentially perilous role of pathogen evolution.
The
research by Carl Bergstrom, University of Washington assistant
professor of biology, Rustom Antia and Roland Regoes, Emory
University biologists, and Jacob Koella, P and M Curie University
in Paris, appears in the Dec. 11 issue of Nature in their
letter "The Role of Evolution in the Emergence of Infectious
Disease."
Tracking
the evolution of pathogens is not a new concept, but mutations
are usually not taken into account in the models used to
assess the emergence of infectious disease. What the researchers
developed is a proposed framework to deal with these mutations
that should be kept in mind when developing models for emerging
infectious diseases such as monkey pox.
New
pathogens are typically believed to emerge from animal populations
when ecological changes increase the pathogens' opportunities
to enter the human population and generate subsequent human-to-human
transmission.
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Current mathematical models used for predicting the
spread of emerging infectious diseases in humans operate from the
standpoint that diseases stay contained if the basic reproductive
number of disease transmissions remains less then one. This means
that the average number of secondary infections from persons infected
with a disease stays below one. While the disease may still spread
to other individuals, the pathogen lines of infection eventually become
extinct, preventing the disease from epidemically spreading across
the population.
In work funded in part by the National Institutes
of Health, the researchers found that factors, such as ecological
changes, that increase the basic reproductive number of the potential
pathogen (but remaining below one and not at a level sufficient to
cause an epidemic) can still greatly increase the length of the random
chains of disease transmission. These long transmission chains provide
opportunity for the pathogen to adapt to human hosts, and subsequently
for the disease to emerge and spread.
One example, Bergstrom says, is monkey pox, which
is thought to be related to smallpox, a disease driven to extinction
by vaccination. However, as immunity to smallpox wanes because people
aren't generally being vaccinated against the disease anymore, the
protection provided against things such as monkey pox also wanes.
That might be the ecological change that could markedly increase the
probability of the evolution of monkey pox, allowing it to emerge
into a successful human pathogen.
Bergstrom and Regoes were responsible for much of
the mathematical modeling, which incorporates branching-process models.
The model shows that transmission rates of a new pathogen can remain
well below an epidemic level, but a disease can still potentially
break out dramatically as new strains evolve and become better adapted
for human transmission, Regoes says.
This article has been adapted from a news release
issued by University Of Washington, www.washington.edu.
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