Weather Regulates Location, Timing, and Intensity of Dengue Virus Transmission between Humans and Mosquitoes.
BACKGROUND:Dengue is one of the most aggressively expanding mosquito-transmitted viruses. The human burden approaches 400 million infections annually. Complex transmission dynamics pose challenges for predicting location, timing, and magnitude of risk; thus, models are needed to guide prevention str...
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doaj-d20e256217d8439896d694c26d7917f92020-11-25T02:27:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases1935-27271935-27352015-01-0197e000395710.1371/journal.pntd.0003957Weather Regulates Location, Timing, and Intensity of Dengue Virus Transmission between Humans and Mosquitoes.Karen M CampbellKristin HaldemanChris LehnigCesar V MunaycoEric S HalseyV Alberto Laguna-TorresMartín YaguiAmy C MorrisonChii-Dean LinThomas W ScottBACKGROUND:Dengue is one of the most aggressively expanding mosquito-transmitted viruses. The human burden approaches 400 million infections annually. Complex transmission dynamics pose challenges for predicting location, timing, and magnitude of risk; thus, models are needed to guide prevention strategies and policy development locally and globally. Weather regulates transmission-potential via its effects on vector dynamics. An important gap in understanding risk and roadblock in model development is an empirical perspective clarifying how weather impacts transmission in diverse ecological settings. We sought to determine if location, timing, and potential-intensity of transmission are systematically defined by weather. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:We developed a high-resolution empirical profile of the local weather-disease connection across Peru, a country with considerable ecological diversity. Applying 2-dimensional weather-space that pairs temperature versus humidity, we mapped local transmission-potential in weather-space by week during 1994-2012. A binary classification-tree was developed to test whether weather data could classify 1828 Peruvian districts as positive/negative for transmission and into ranks of transmission-potential with respect to observed disease. We show that transmission-potential is regulated by temperature-humidity coupling, enabling epidemics in a limited area of weather-space. Duration within a specific temperature range defines transmission-potential that is amplified exponentially in higher humidity. Dengue-positive districts were identified by mean temperature >22°C for 7+ weeks and minimum temperature >14°C for 33+ weeks annually with 95% sensitivity and specificity. In elevated-risk locations, seasonal peak-incidence occurred when mean temperature was 26-29°C, coincident with humidity at its local maximum; highest incidence when humidity >80%. We profile transmission-potential in weather-space for temperature-humidity ranging 0-38°C and 5-100% at 1°C x 2% resolution. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:Local duration in limited areas of temperature-humidity weather-space identifies potential locations, timing, and magnitude of transmission. The weather-space profile of transmission-potential provides needed data that define a systematic and highly-sensitive weather-disease connection, demonstrating separate but coupled roles of temperature and humidity. New insights regarding natural regulation of human-mosquito transmission across diverse ecological settings advance our understanding of risk locally and globally for dengue and other mosquito-borne diseases and support advances in public health policy/operations, providing an evidence-base for modeling, predicting risk, and surveillance-prevention planning.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4519153?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Karen M Campbell Kristin Haldeman Chris Lehnig Cesar V Munayco Eric S Halsey V Alberto Laguna-Torres Martín Yagui Amy C Morrison Chii-Dean Lin Thomas W Scott |
spellingShingle |
Karen M Campbell Kristin Haldeman Chris Lehnig Cesar V Munayco Eric S Halsey V Alberto Laguna-Torres Martín Yagui Amy C Morrison Chii-Dean Lin Thomas W Scott Weather Regulates Location, Timing, and Intensity of Dengue Virus Transmission between Humans and Mosquitoes. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases |
author_facet |
Karen M Campbell Kristin Haldeman Chris Lehnig Cesar V Munayco Eric S Halsey V Alberto Laguna-Torres Martín Yagui Amy C Morrison Chii-Dean Lin Thomas W Scott |
author_sort |
Karen M Campbell |
title |
Weather Regulates Location, Timing, and Intensity of Dengue Virus Transmission between Humans and Mosquitoes. |
title_short |
Weather Regulates Location, Timing, and Intensity of Dengue Virus Transmission between Humans and Mosquitoes. |
title_full |
Weather Regulates Location, Timing, and Intensity of Dengue Virus Transmission between Humans and Mosquitoes. |
title_fullStr |
Weather Regulates Location, Timing, and Intensity of Dengue Virus Transmission between Humans and Mosquitoes. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Weather Regulates Location, Timing, and Intensity of Dengue Virus Transmission between Humans and Mosquitoes. |
title_sort |
weather regulates location, timing, and intensity of dengue virus transmission between humans and mosquitoes. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases |
issn |
1935-2727 1935-2735 |
publishDate |
2015-01-01 |
description |
BACKGROUND:Dengue is one of the most aggressively expanding mosquito-transmitted viruses. The human burden approaches 400 million infections annually. Complex transmission dynamics pose challenges for predicting location, timing, and magnitude of risk; thus, models are needed to guide prevention strategies and policy development locally and globally. Weather regulates transmission-potential via its effects on vector dynamics. An important gap in understanding risk and roadblock in model development is an empirical perspective clarifying how weather impacts transmission in diverse ecological settings. We sought to determine if location, timing, and potential-intensity of transmission are systematically defined by weather. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:We developed a high-resolution empirical profile of the local weather-disease connection across Peru, a country with considerable ecological diversity. Applying 2-dimensional weather-space that pairs temperature versus humidity, we mapped local transmission-potential in weather-space by week during 1994-2012. A binary classification-tree was developed to test whether weather data could classify 1828 Peruvian districts as positive/negative for transmission and into ranks of transmission-potential with respect to observed disease. We show that transmission-potential is regulated by temperature-humidity coupling, enabling epidemics in a limited area of weather-space. Duration within a specific temperature range defines transmission-potential that is amplified exponentially in higher humidity. Dengue-positive districts were identified by mean temperature >22°C for 7+ weeks and minimum temperature >14°C for 33+ weeks annually with 95% sensitivity and specificity. In elevated-risk locations, seasonal peak-incidence occurred when mean temperature was 26-29°C, coincident with humidity at its local maximum; highest incidence when humidity >80%. We profile transmission-potential in weather-space for temperature-humidity ranging 0-38°C and 5-100% at 1°C x 2% resolution. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:Local duration in limited areas of temperature-humidity weather-space identifies potential locations, timing, and magnitude of transmission. The weather-space profile of transmission-potential provides needed data that define a systematic and highly-sensitive weather-disease connection, demonstrating separate but coupled roles of temperature and humidity. New insights regarding natural regulation of human-mosquito transmission across diverse ecological settings advance our understanding of risk locally and globally for dengue and other mosquito-borne diseases and support advances in public health policy/operations, providing an evidence-base for modeling, predicting risk, and surveillance-prevention planning. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4519153?pdf=render |
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