Title: SingaporeWHO Health Forum
1Modeling of Dengue TransmissionRole of
Transmission Thresholds, the Pupal Demographic
Survey, Targeted Source Reduction, and the
Utility of El Niño Southern Oscillation Forecasts
- Singapore-WHO Health Forum
- Environmental Dimensions and Policies for Dengue
Prevention and Control - 22-25 October 2001
- Dana A. Focks
- Temporary Advisor for WHO
2Outline of topics to be covered
- Simulation models
- Pupal and demographic survey vs. traditional
Stegomyia indices - Transmission thresholds and risk assessment
- Targeted source reduction
- Early-warning system based on El Niño Southern
Oscillation (ENSO) forecasts and sea surface
temperature (SST) anomalies - Materials available at www.ID-Analysis.com
3Simulation models- characteristics
- Mechanistic, first principals, life history
- Site-specific requiring information on
- Types, numbers, productivity of breeding
containers - Daily rainfall and temperature
- Demographic information- age-specific birth,
death, and seroprevalence rates - Available in DOS and Windows versions
- Web page on models, survey methods, etc.,
available - DOS versions available
- This PowerPoint at www.ID-Analysis.com
4Simulation models- applications
- Studies on the impact of climate change
- Basic research
- Biting behavior of Ae. aegypti- Thailand, NIH
- Influence of endemic filariasis- NIH
- Impact of El Niño Southern Oscillation events-
Indonesia Vi?t Nam - Applied studies
- Entomological assumptions of dengue control-
Peru, NIH - Development of transmission thresholds
- Optimization of control programs
- Teaching and training
5Simulation models- CIMSiM
6Simulation models- DENSiM
7Pupal and demographic survey
- Comparison of 3 traditional Stegomyia indices and
an absolute density measure- pupae per person
- Note-
- No correlation between traditional indices and
risk - Risk varies spatially at scales of neighborhood,
town, and country
8Pupal and demographic survey
Pupae per person, hence risk, varies on multiple
scales- shown here at the neighborhood level
The Mynas neighborhood in Iquitos, Peru
9Pupal and demographic survey
- Modification and extension of the traditional
survey method of counting larvae-positive
containers for risk assessment and directing
control efforts - The survey method
- All water-holding containers are examined for the
presence of pupae, data recorded by type of
container - Number of people residing at house recorded
- Need to survey ca. 50 houses to obtain useful
information - Provides estimates by type of container of
- pupae / container- important for targeted source
reduction - pupae / person- essential for risk assessment,
thresholds - Also provides estimates of traditional indices
10Transmission thresholds and risk assessment
- What is the relationship between survey results
and risk? There are a number of factors - Pupae per person
- Seroprevalence of antibody
- Circulating viruses
- Temperature
- Host availability
- Control efforts
Entomologic factors
Serologic factors
11Transmission thresholds and risk assessment
- Two approaches have been used to relate risk as a
function of temperature, pupae per person, and
seroprevalence - Initial method Parameterize CIMSiM/DENSiM and
evaluate- difficult - Current method Use a simple table of
transmission thresholds- easy
12Transmission thresholds and risk assessment
- Thresholds based on two well-known concepts
- The Mass Action Principal- the course of an
epidemic is dependent on the rate of contact
between susceptible hosts and infectious vectors - Threshold Theory- the introduction of a few
infectious individuals into a community of
susceptibles will not give rise to an outbreak
unless the density of vectors exceeds a certain
critical level
Focks, D. A., R. J. Brenner, J. Hayes, E.
Daniels. 2000. Transmission thresholds for dengue
in terms of Aedes aegypti pupae per person with
discussion of their utility in source reduction
efforts. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 62 11-18.
13Transmission thresholds- development
- Gonotrophic development rate (table) and daily
survival estimated with CIMSiM
Temp (oC) Rate (da-1)
Weight (mg) 22 .165 .233 24 .199
.232 26 .239 .233 28 .287 .236 30
.344 .244 32 .411 .275 Adult survival
independent of temperature- 0.89 / day
14Transmission thresholds- development
- Survivals, egg hatch, and the possibility of
adult populations as a function of temperature
Temp (oC) Population Sadult Segg S larval
S pupal Egg hatch 20 -
89 97 99 99 - 22
89 92 99 99 24
89 88 99 99 26
89 84 99 99 28
89 78-80 99 99 30
89 68-72 99 99
32 89 58-62 99 99
34 89 52-55 99 99
36 - 81 46-49 99 99
15Transmission thresholds- development
- The pupal development period, expected daily
number of newly-emerged females, and associated
standing crop of females of all ages for a
standing crop of 100 Ae. aegypti pupae
Temp Days Number of adult
females Ratios of standing crops
New Standing crop Pupae/female
Females/pupa 22 4.06 10.2 88
1.14 0.88 24 3.33 12.5 107
0.94 1.07 26 2.66 15.6 134
0.75 1.34 28 2.04 20.4 175
0.57 1.75 30 1.46 28.4 244
0.41 2.44 32 0.92 45.2 388
0.26 3.88
16Transmission thresholds- development
- Incubation period of the virus in the mosquito
(EIP), a non-linear function of temperature,
influences the proportion of females with virus
and strongly influences transmission potential
initial blood meal with virus
proportion infected at high temp
infected at low temp
EIPwarm
EIPcool
17Transmission thresholds- the table
- Transmission thresholds by temperature and
initial seroprevalence a
Temp C Initial seroprevalence of
antibody 0 33 67 22 7.13 10.7 23.
3 24 2.20 3.47 7.11
26 1.05 1.55 3.41 28 0.42 0.61 1.27
30 0.10 0.15 0.30 32 0.06 0.09 0.16
a assuming 12 monthly introductions of a single
viremic individual
18Transmission thresholds- as a function of the
magnitude of viral introduction
- Thresholds at 28oC for single (one-time)
introductions of 1, 2, 4, or 8 viremic
individuals, and 12 monthly introductions of a
single viremic person as a function of initial
seroprevalence
19Transmission thresholds- observed pupae per
person
- Observed average numbers of Ae. aegypti pupae
per person in various dengue-endemic or
dengue-receptive locations
Location Average annual temp
Pupae per person Reynosa, Mexico 23.0
2.8 Mayaguez, Puerto Rico 25.9
1.7 Yogyakarta, Indonesia 26.3
0.5 Trinidad (20 sites) 27.0 22.7 a San
Juan, Puerto Rico 27.3 2.8 Bangkok,
Thailand 28.7 1.7 a range 1.4
63.4
20Targeted source reduction
- History of dengue control methods
- Insecticides
- Eradication
- On-going source reduction
- Combinations
21Targeted source reduction
- See spreadsheet- Worksheet to targeted
reductions- S Viet Nam.xls
www.ID-Analysis.com
22Targeted source reduction- the importance of
especially productive breeding containers
- Distribution of the number of pupae/container is
not normally distributed, but clumped - In some locations, less than 1 of containers
produce gt95 of the adults - Rare containers account for essentially all
production in some areas examined - Iquitos, Peru
- Northern Mexico and southern Texas
- San Juan and Mayaguez, Puerto Rico
- Yogyakarta, Indonesia- an exception!
- In some communities, productive containers can be
found quickly by their characteristics- outdoors,
abandoned, under vegetation, etc. - Control based on controlling rare but productive
containers - Cheaper than insecticides and traditional source
reduction - Could be initiated in response to epidemic or
ENSO forecast - Manuscript in preparation
23Early warning systems- based on SST, lagged
cases, weather
24Proposed early warning and control system for
Viet Nam
- The National Programme for the Control of Dengue
Fever/Dengue Haemorrhagic Fever
- Preventing DHF epidemics elimination of
DHF-related mortality - Reducing DF/DHF morbidity of a level where it
is no longer a major public health problem - Confirming the clinical diagnosis of dengue in
10 of cases in selected provinces and identify
the serotypes involved - Control methods are community-based involving
the integrated use of insecticides, biologicals,
source reduction, and education
Chief architects of the National Programme Dr.
Vu Sin Nam, Chief Entomologist, National
Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology, Ha
Noi Dr. Nguyen Thi Kim Tien, Deputy Director,
Pasteur Institute and Chief of Planning
Department for Research, Training, and
Co-operation, Ho Chi Minh City
25Proposed early warning and control system for
Viet Nam
- Similar trends observed in neighboring countries
of Cambodia, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, and
Indonesia - Trends reflect the interaction of many
factors--herd immunity, virus types circulating,
etc. - Trends also reflect, to a significant degree, the
weather anomalies associated with El Niño
Southern Oscillation events
Dengue in Viet Nam
26Proposed early warning and control system for
Viet Nam
El Niño Southern Oscillation Weather anomalies
and prediction using sea surface temperatures and
models
- ENSO is associated with epidemiologically
significant temperature and precipitation
anomalies in the region of Viet Nam - These anomalies are clearly and significantly
(statistically, and from a practical stand point)
associated with corresponding anomalies in dengue
activity - The region of Viet Nam has a strong ENSO-related
temperature signal as seen in comparisons of
regional-scale surface air temperature (SAT) for
the region with sea surface temperature (SST) - The SAT record lags the SST record slightly
meaning that satellite-observed SST can be used
to predict weather anomalies 3 months in advance - Atmospheric models provide somewhat less reliable
forecasts, but with greater lead times 6 to 9
months
Who is El Niño anyway?. . And why cant we kill
him?
27Proposed early warning and control system for
Viet Nam
- Goal of proposed effort is to strengthen the
National Programme by introducing in a
sustainable fashion new tools involving - Pupal and demographic survey permitting targeted
source reduction and biocontrol using Mesocyclops
Micronecta on a spatial basis - Development of a GIS-based risk map system
displaying, at the district level, estimates of
pupae/person and transmission thresholds as a
function of herd immunity, historical weather and
ENSO forecasts
28Proposed early warning and control system for
Viet Nam
Results of a hypothetical pupal and demographic
survey indicating the numbers and types of
containers per hectare, their associated average
standing crop of Ae. aegypti pupae, and the
contributions each makes toward the transmission
threshold as a function of temperature.
Temperature anomalies associated with ENSO state
are lower and higher than normal for La Niña and
El Niño, respectively.
1 The numbers in parentheses refer to the
thresholds associated with the historical
temperature anomalies associated with ENSO state.
29Proposed early warning and control system for
Viet Nam
Development of an ENSO-based risk map-
- Climate work- develop for each province
estimates of - Normal monthly weather and
- Departures from normal as a function of ENSO
state for each month - Entomological surveys-
- NIHE and Pasteur conduct detailed pupal
demographic surveys in representative areas - obtain estimates of average pupae/container by
type of container - Identify especially productive types of
containers - Collaborator system supplies counts of containers
by type - Risk assessment- Estimate pupae/person using 1)
collaborator data on numbers and types of
containers combined with 2) NIHE/Pasteur data on
pupae/container
30Proposed early warning and control system for
Viet Nam
Development of an ENSO-based risk map, contd-
- Develop GIS systems- National Institute of
Hygiene and Epidemiology and Pasteur Institute to
display by district and month - Observed pupae/person
- Current and projected transmission thresholds
- Results of active surveillance- virologic,
serologic, case reports - GIS systems highlight-
- Current risk maps of the ratio of observed
pupae/person to thresholds - Risk maps of anticipated conditions as a function
of predicted ENSO state or SST anomalies - Results- Effort allows evaluating/estimating a
number of critical elements - Degree of suppression required
- Guidance on targeting intervention efforts
- Ability to evaluate efforts
- Early warning of epidemic conditions
31References
- Focks DA, Haile DG, Daniels E, Mount GA, 1993.
Dynamic life table model for Aedes aegypti (L.)
(Diptera Culicidae). Analysis of the literature
and model development. J Med Entomol 30
1003-1017. - Focks DA, Haile DG, Daniels E, Mount GA, 1993.
Dynamic life table model for Aedes aegypti (L.)
(Diptera Culicidae). Simulation results and
validation. J Med Entomol 30 1018-1028. - Focks DA, Daniels E, Haile DG, Keesling JE, 1995.
A simulation model of the epidemiology of urban
dengue fever Literature analysis, model
development, preliminary validation, and samples
of simulation results. Am J Trop Med Hyg 53
489-506. - Focks DA, Chadee DD. 1997. Pupal survey An
epidemiologically significant surveillance method
for Aedes aegypti An example using data from
Trinidad. Am J Trop Med Hyg 56 159-167. - Jetten TH, Focks DA. 1997. Changes in the
distribution of dengue transmission under climate
warming scenarios. Am J Trop Med Hyg 57
285-297. - Martens WJM, Jetten TH, Focks DA. 1997.
Sensitivity of malaria, schistosomiasis and
dengue to global warming. Climate Change 35
145-156. - Patz JA, Martens WJM, Focks DA, Jetten TH. 1998.
Dengue fever epidemic potential as projected by
general circulation models of global climate
change. Environ Hlth Perspectives 106 147-152. - Focks DA, Brenner RJ, Chadee DD, Trosper J. 1998.
The use of spatial analysis in the control and
risk assessment of vector-borne diseases. Am
Entomologist 45 173-183. - Focks DA, Brenner RA, Daniels E, Hayes J. 2000.
Transmission thresholds for dengue in terms of
Aedes aegypti pupae per person with discussion of
their utility in source reduction efforts. Am J
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Mearns LO, Kittel TGF, Rawlings J. 2001.
Projections and analysis of the consequences of
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Texas and northern Mexico. Environ Hlth
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