Abstract

Influenza-like illness (ILI) is a commonly measured syndromic signal representative of a range of acute respiratory infections. Reliable forecasts of ILI can support better preparation for patient surges in healthcare systems. Although ILI is an amalgamation of multiple pathogens with variable seasonal phasing and attack rates, most existing process-based forecasting systems treat ILI as a single infectious agent. Here, using ILI records and virologic surveillance data, we show that ILI signal can be disaggregated into distinct viral components. We generate separate predictions for six contributing pathogens (influenza A/H1, A/H3, B, respiratory syncytial virus, and human parainfluenza virus types 1-2 and 3), and develop a method to forecast ILI by aggregating these predictions. The relative contribution of each pathogen to the total ILI signal is estimated using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method upon forecast aggregation. We find highly variable overall contributions from influenza type A viruses across seasons, but relatively stable contributions for the other pathogens. Using historical data from 1997 to 2014 at US national and regional levels, the proposed forecasting system generates improved predictions of both seasonal and near-term targets relative to a baseline method that simulates ILI as a single pathogen. The hierarchical forecasting system can generate predictions for each viral component, as well as infer and predict their contributions to ILI, which may additionally help physicians determine the etiological causes of ILI in clinical settings.

Highlights

  • Acute respiratory infections impose heavy morbidity and mortality burdens on global populations, especially children and the elderly [1]

  • Influenza-like illness (ILI) is an amalgamation of multiple pathogens with variable seasonal phasing and contributions to incidence, to our knowledge, all existing process-based forecasting systems treat ILI as a single infectious agent

  • ILI is a syndromic record that represents a range of illnesses, to our knowledge, all current process-based forecasting systems treat ILI as a single pathogen [16,17,18]

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Summary

Introduction

Acute respiratory infections impose heavy morbidity and mortality burdens on global populations, especially children and the elderly [1]. Common viruses contributing to ILI include influenza, respiratory syncytial virus, human parainfluenza virus, coronavirus, human metapneumovirus, respiratory adenovirus and rhinovirus [19,20,21,22]. Clinically indistinguishable, these viral signals have disparate seasonal characteristics, and vary in their contributions to ILI during different times of the year. ILI is a syndromic record that represents a range of illnesses, to our knowledge, all current process-based forecasting systems treat ILI as a single pathogen [16,17,18]. Single-pathogen forecasting systems are unable to estimate and predict the relative contribution of each component pathogen

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