Implications of Heterogeneous Biting Exposure and Animal Hosts on Trypanosomiasis brucei gambiense Transmission and Control.

The gambiense form of sleeping sickness is a neglected tropical disease, which is presumed to be anthroponotic. However, the parasite persists in human populations at levels of considerable rarity and as such the existence of animal reservoirs has been posited. Clarifying the impact of animal host r...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chris M Stone, Nakul Chitnis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-10-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4591123?pdf=render
_version_ 1818338604947079168
author Chris M Stone
Nakul Chitnis
author_facet Chris M Stone
Nakul Chitnis
author_sort Chris M Stone
collection DOAJ
description The gambiense form of sleeping sickness is a neglected tropical disease, which is presumed to be anthroponotic. However, the parasite persists in human populations at levels of considerable rarity and as such the existence of animal reservoirs has been posited. Clarifying the impact of animal host reservoirs on the feasibility of interrupting sleeping sickness transmission through interventions is a matter of urgency. We developed a mathematical model allowing for heterogeneous exposure of humans to tsetse, with animal populations that differed in their ability to transmit infections, to investigate the effectiveness of two established techniques, screening and treatment of at-risk populations, and vector control. Importantly, under both assumptions, an integrated approach of human screening and vector control was supported in high transmission areas. However, increasing the intensity of vector control was more likely to eliminate transmission, while increasing the intensity of human screening reduced the time to elimination. Non-human animal hosts played important, but different roles in HAT transmission, depending on whether or not they contributed as reservoirs. If they did not serve as reservoirs, sensitivity analyses suggested their attractiveness may instead function as a sink for tsetse bites. These outcomes highlight the importance of understanding the ecological and environmental context of sleeping sickness in optimizing integrated interventions, particularly for moderate and low transmission intensity settings.
first_indexed 2024-12-13T15:13:46Z
format Article
id doaj.art-86deb71662b845eca659916bebdf3d74
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-13T15:13:46Z
publishDate 2015-10-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS Computational Biology
spelling doaj.art-86deb71662b845eca659916bebdf3d742022-12-21T23:40:46ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582015-10-011110e100451410.1371/journal.pcbi.1004514Implications of Heterogeneous Biting Exposure and Animal Hosts on Trypanosomiasis brucei gambiense Transmission and Control.Chris M StoneNakul ChitnisThe gambiense form of sleeping sickness is a neglected tropical disease, which is presumed to be anthroponotic. However, the parasite persists in human populations at levels of considerable rarity and as such the existence of animal reservoirs has been posited. Clarifying the impact of animal host reservoirs on the feasibility of interrupting sleeping sickness transmission through interventions is a matter of urgency. We developed a mathematical model allowing for heterogeneous exposure of humans to tsetse, with animal populations that differed in their ability to transmit infections, to investigate the effectiveness of two established techniques, screening and treatment of at-risk populations, and vector control. Importantly, under both assumptions, an integrated approach of human screening and vector control was supported in high transmission areas. However, increasing the intensity of vector control was more likely to eliminate transmission, while increasing the intensity of human screening reduced the time to elimination. Non-human animal hosts played important, but different roles in HAT transmission, depending on whether or not they contributed as reservoirs. If they did not serve as reservoirs, sensitivity analyses suggested their attractiveness may instead function as a sink for tsetse bites. These outcomes highlight the importance of understanding the ecological and environmental context of sleeping sickness in optimizing integrated interventions, particularly for moderate and low transmission intensity settings.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4591123?pdf=render
spellingShingle Chris M Stone
Nakul Chitnis
Implications of Heterogeneous Biting Exposure and Animal Hosts on Trypanosomiasis brucei gambiense Transmission and Control.
PLoS Computational Biology
title Implications of Heterogeneous Biting Exposure and Animal Hosts on Trypanosomiasis brucei gambiense Transmission and Control.
title_full Implications of Heterogeneous Biting Exposure and Animal Hosts on Trypanosomiasis brucei gambiense Transmission and Control.
title_fullStr Implications of Heterogeneous Biting Exposure and Animal Hosts on Trypanosomiasis brucei gambiense Transmission and Control.
title_full_unstemmed Implications of Heterogeneous Biting Exposure and Animal Hosts on Trypanosomiasis brucei gambiense Transmission and Control.
title_short Implications of Heterogeneous Biting Exposure and Animal Hosts on Trypanosomiasis brucei gambiense Transmission and Control.
title_sort implications of heterogeneous biting exposure and animal hosts on trypanosomiasis brucei gambiense transmission and control
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4591123?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT chrismstone implicationsofheterogeneousbitingexposureandanimalhostsontrypanosomiasisbruceigambiensetransmissionandcontrol
AT nakulchitnis implicationsofheterogeneousbitingexposureandanimalhostsontrypanosomiasisbruceigambiensetransmissionandcontrol