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SIR Epidemic and Vaccination

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Presentation on theme: "SIR Epidemic and Vaccination"— Presentation transcript:

1 SIR Epidemic and Vaccination
Infection Transmission Plus Host Birth, Death Purpose: What fraction of hosts must be vaccinated in order to eradicate disease?

2 Compartments & Virulence
Susceptible, Infective, Recovered Hosts Background Mortality: All classes Virulence: Extra mortality, Infected hosts only Reproduction: All classes; Hosts Born S

3 Parameters b Per-capitum Birth Transmission Rate (Mass Action)
d Non-Disease Mortality (All) D Infective Mortality (D – d): Virulence > 0  Recovery from Infection

4 Dynamics of General Epidemic

5 Assumptions When Rare, Pathogen Invades Host Pop. R0 > 1 Invasion Criterion Equilibrium: Endemic Infection if R0 > 1 Vaccine Available: What level of vaccination (reduction in susceptibility) would prevent disease form advancing when rare?

6 Vaccination Control (Ricklefs & Miller, 2000)

7 Disease Locale R0 pV Smallpox Developing World 3 - 5 0.7 – 0.8 Measles
May, 1983; Includes corrections for vaccine efficiencies Disease Locale R0 pV Smallpox Developing World 3 - 5 0.7 – 0.8 Measles England 13 0.92 Whooping cough 17 0.94 Rubella 6 0.83 Chicken Pox US 9 - 10 0.9 Diphtheria 4 - 6 0.8 Scarlet fever 5 - 7 Mumps 4 - 7 Polio Netherlands Malaria Nigeria 80 0.99 16

8 Why is virulence so diverse?
Define Virulence Reduction in Host Fitness Due to Pathogen’s Reproduction Increased Host Mortality Rate “Sub-lethal” Diminished Host Fecundity Cost of Immune Response Decline in Competitive Ability Why is virulence so diverse?

9 Increase Host Mortality Decrease Host Fecundity
Virulence: Process Pathogen Takes Resources from Host Energy, Nutrients “Virulence Factors” Pathogen Growth Releases Substance Toxic to Host Increase Host Mortality Decrease Host Fecundity

10 Virulence: Trade-Off Pathogen Evolves Faster than Host
Benefit of Increased Virulence Faster Pathogen Growth  Increased Transmission Rate Cost of Increased Virulence Duration of Infectious Period Reduced Via Greater Host Mortality

11 Virulence: Trade-Off Greater Transmission Rate 
Requires Greater Virulence 

12 Natural Selection and Virulence?
Evolutionarily Stable Virulence 𝛼 ∗ Maximizes 𝑅 0 = Number of Infections/Infection When Rare Equivalently, 𝛼 ∗ Minimizes Density of Susceptible Hosts at Endemic Equilibrium

13 Evolutionarily Stable Virulence

14 ES Virulence Maximizes 𝑹 𝟎

15 Maximal Infections per Infection
Assumes: Fully Mixed Population {0, 1} Host Infections Direct-Contact Transmission Before Host Death or Recovery Monomorphic Solution! Example Where Assumptions Fit

16 Fraser et al. 2007. PNAS 104:17441-17446 Set-Point Viral Load of HIV-1
Peripheral Density, Asymptomatic Period Dependence of Set-Point on Viral Replication Unclear Infectiousness Increases with Viral Load Duration of Infectious Period Declines Viral Life-History Trade-Off?

17 Viral Load: Heterogeneity

18 Transmission Rate-Duration Trade-Off
Duration of Infectious Period

19 E[Infections per Case]

20 𝑹 𝟎 and E[Growth Rate]


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