Farrington CP, Whitaker HJ, Unkel S, Pebody R. Correlated infections:
quantifying individual heterogeneity in the spread of infectious diseases.
American Journal of Epidemiology. 2013;177(5):474-486.
Abstract: In this
paper, we propose new methods for investigating the extent of heterogeneity in
effective contact rates relevant to the transmission of infections. These
methods exploit the correlations between ages at infection for different
infections within individuals. The methods are developed for serological
surveys, which provide accessible individual data on several infections, and
are applied to a wide range of infections. We find that childhood infections
are often highly correlated within individuals in early childhood, with the correlations
persisting into adulthood only for infections sharing a transmission route. We
discuss 2 applications of the methods: 1) to making inferences about routes of
transmission when these are unknown or uncertain and 2) to estimating
epidemiologic parameters such as the basic reproduction number and the critical
immunization threshold. Two examples of such applications are presented:
elucidating the transmission route of polyomaviruses BK and JC and estimating
the basic reproduction number and critical immunization coverage of
varicella-zoster infection in Belgium, Italy, Poland, and England and Wales. We
speculate that childhood correlations stem from confounding of different
transmission routes and represent heterogeneity in childhood circumstances, notably
nursery-school attendance. In contrast, it is suggested that correlations in
adulthood are route-specific.
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