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Citation

Salje, Henrik; Lessler, Justin; Maljkovic Berry, Irina; Melendrez, Melanie C.; Endy, Timothy P.; Kalayanarooj, Siripen; A-Nuegoonpipat, Atchareeya; Chanama, Sumalee; Sangkijporn, Somchai; & Klungthong, Chonticha, et al. (2017). Dengue Diversity across Spatial and Temporal Scales: Local Structure and the Effect of Host Population Size. Science, 355(6331), 1302-1306. PMCID: PMC5777672

Abstract

A fundamental mystery for dengue and other infectious pathogens is how observed patterns of cases relate to actual chains of individual transmission events. These pathways are intimately tied to the mechanisms by which strains interact and compete across spatial scales. Phylogeographic methods have been used to characterize pathogen dispersal at global and regional scales but have yielded few insights into the local spatiotemporal structure of endemic transmission. Using geolocated genotype (800 cases) and serotype (17,291 cases) data, we show that in Bangkok, Thailand, 60% of dengue cases living <200 meters apart come from the same transmission chain, as opposed to 3% of cases separated by 1 to 5 kilometers. At distances <200 meters from a case (encompassing an average of 1300 people in Bangkok), the effective number of chains is 1.7. This number rises by a factor of 7 for each 10-fold increase in the population of the "enclosed" region. This trend is observed regardless of whether population density or area increases, though increases in density over 7000 people per square kilometer do not lead to additional chains. Within Thailand these chains quickly mix, and by the next dengue season viral lineages are no longer highly spatially structured within the country. In contrast, viral flow to neighboring countries is limited. These findings are consistent with local, density-dependent transmission and implicate densely populated communities as key sources of viral diversity, with home location the focal point of transmission. These findings have important implications for targeted vector control and active surveillance.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aaj9384

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2017

Journal Title

Science

Author(s)

Salje, Henrik
Lessler, Justin
Maljkovic Berry, Irina
Melendrez, Melanie C.
Endy, Timothy P.
Kalayanarooj, Siripen
A-Nuegoonpipat, Atchareeya
Chanama, Sumalee
Sangkijporn, Somchai
Klungthong, Chonticha
Thaisomboonsuk, Butsaya
Nisalak, Ananda
Gibbons, Robert V.
Iamsirithaworn, Sopon
Macareo, Louis R.
Yoon, In-Kyu
Sangarsang, Areerat
Jarman, Richard G.
Cummings, Derek A. T.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC5777672

Continent/Country

Thailand

ORCiD

Lessler - 0000-0002-9741-8109