Efficient Prevalence Estimation for Emerging and Seasonal Diseases Under Limited Resources
Estimating the prevalence rate of a disease is crucial for controlling its spread, and for planning of healthcare services. Due to limited testing budgets and resources, prevalence estimation typically entails pooled, or group, testing where specimens (e.g., blood, urine, tissue swabs) from a number...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-1067022021-11-22T05:36:57Z Efficient Prevalence Estimation for Emerging and Seasonal Diseases Under Limited Resources Nguyen, Ngoc Thu Industrial and Systems Engineering Bish, Ebru K. Jin, Ran Bish, Douglas R. Xie, Weijun Prevalence estimation Testing pool design Limited resources Emerging and/or seasonal diseases Robust optimization Estimating the prevalence rate of a disease is crucial for controlling its spread, and for planning of healthcare services. Due to limited testing budgets and resources, prevalence estimation typically entails pooled, or group, testing where specimens (e.g., blood, urine, tissue swabs) from a number of subjects are combined into a testing pool, which is then tested via a single test. Testing outcomes from multiple pools are analyzed so as to assess the prevalence of the disease. The accuracy of prevalence estimation relies on the testing pool design, i.e., the number of pools to test and the pool sizes (the number of specimens to combine in a pool). Determining an optimal pool design for prevalence estimation can be challenging, as it requires prior information on the current status of the disease, which can be highly unreliable, or simply unavailable, especially for emerging and/or seasonal diseases. We develop and study frameworks for prevalence estimation, under highly unreliable prior information on the disease and limited testing budgets. Embedded into each estimation framework is an optimization model that determines the optimal testing pool design, considering the trade-off between testing cost and estimation accuracy. We establish important structural properties of optimal testing pool designs in various settings, and develop efficient and exact algorithms. Our numerous case studies, ranging from prevalence estimation of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in various parts of Africa, to prevalence estimation of diseases in plants and insects, including the Tomato Spotted Wilt virus in thrips and West Nile virus in mosquitoes, indicate that the proposed estimation methods substantially outperform current approaches developed in the literature, and produce robust testing pool designs that can hedge against the uncertainty in model inputs.Our research findings indicate that the proposed prevalence estimation frameworks are capable of producing accurate prevalence estimates, and are highly desirable, especially for emerging and/or seasonal diseases under limited testing budgets. Doctor of Philosophy 2021-11-21T07:00:06Z 2021-11-21T07:00:06Z 2019-05-30 Dissertation vt_gsexam:20519 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/106702 This item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. Some uses of this item may be deemed fair and permitted by law even without permission from the rights holder(s), or the rights holder(s) may have licensed the work for use under certain conditions. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights holder(s). ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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Prevalence estimation Testing pool design Limited resources Emerging and/or seasonal diseases Robust optimization |
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Prevalence estimation Testing pool design Limited resources Emerging and/or seasonal diseases Robust optimization Nguyen, Ngoc Thu Efficient Prevalence Estimation for Emerging and Seasonal Diseases Under Limited Resources |
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Estimating the prevalence rate of a disease is crucial for controlling its spread, and for planning of healthcare services. Due to limited testing budgets and resources, prevalence estimation typically entails pooled, or group, testing where specimens (e.g., blood, urine, tissue swabs) from a number of subjects are combined into a testing pool, which is then tested via a single test. Testing outcomes from multiple pools are analyzed so as to assess the prevalence of the disease. The accuracy of prevalence estimation relies on the testing pool design, i.e., the number of pools to test and the pool sizes (the number of specimens to combine in a pool). Determining an optimal pool design for prevalence estimation can be challenging, as it requires prior information on the current status of the disease, which can be highly unreliable, or simply unavailable, especially for emerging and/or seasonal diseases.
We develop and study frameworks for prevalence estimation, under highly unreliable prior information on the disease and limited testing budgets. Embedded into each estimation framework is an optimization model that determines the optimal testing pool design, considering the trade-off between testing cost and estimation accuracy. We establish important structural properties of optimal testing pool designs in various settings, and develop efficient and exact algorithms. Our numerous case studies, ranging from prevalence estimation of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in various parts of Africa, to prevalence estimation of diseases in plants and insects, including the Tomato Spotted Wilt virus in thrips and West Nile virus in mosquitoes, indicate that the proposed estimation methods substantially outperform current approaches developed in the literature, and produce robust testing pool designs that can hedge against the uncertainty in model inputs.Our research findings indicate that the proposed prevalence estimation frameworks are capable of producing accurate prevalence estimates, and are highly desirable, especially for emerging and/or seasonal diseases under limited testing budgets. === Doctor of Philosophy |
author2 |
Industrial and Systems Engineering |
author_facet |
Industrial and Systems Engineering Nguyen, Ngoc Thu |
author |
Nguyen, Ngoc Thu |
author_sort |
Nguyen, Ngoc Thu |
title |
Efficient Prevalence Estimation for Emerging and Seasonal Diseases Under Limited Resources |
title_short |
Efficient Prevalence Estimation for Emerging and Seasonal Diseases Under Limited Resources |
title_full |
Efficient Prevalence Estimation for Emerging and Seasonal Diseases Under Limited Resources |
title_fullStr |
Efficient Prevalence Estimation for Emerging and Seasonal Diseases Under Limited Resources |
title_full_unstemmed |
Efficient Prevalence Estimation for Emerging and Seasonal Diseases Under Limited Resources |
title_sort |
efficient prevalence estimation for emerging and seasonal diseases under limited resources |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/106702 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT nguyenngocthu efficientprevalenceestimationforemergingandseasonaldiseasesunderlimitedresources |
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1719494690290532352 |