Abstract

BackgroundThere are growing demands for predicting the prospects of achieving the global elimination of neglected tropical diseases as a result of the institution of large-scale nation-wide intervention programs by the WHO-set target year of 2020. Such predictions will be uncertain due to the impacts that spatial heterogeneity and scaling effects will have on parasite transmission processes, which will introduce significant aggregation errors into any attempt aiming to predict the outcomes of interventions at the broader spatial levels relevant to policy making. We describe a modeling platform that addresses this problem of upscaling from local settings to facilitate predictions at regional levels by the discovery and use of locality-specific transmission models, and we illustrate the utility of using this approach to evaluate the prospects for eliminating the vector-borne disease, lymphatic filariasis (LF), in sub-Saharan Africa by the WHO target year of 2020 using currently applied or newly proposed intervention strategies.Methods and ResultsWe show how a computational platform that couples site-specific data discovery with model fitting and calibration can allow both learning of local LF transmission models and simulations of the impact of interventions that take a fuller account of the fine-scale heterogeneous transmission of this parasitic disease within endemic countries. We highlight how such a spatially hierarchical modeling tool that incorporates actual data regarding the roll-out of national drug treatment programs and spatial variability in infection patterns into the modeling process can produce more realistic predictions of timelines to LF elimination at coarse spatial scales, ranging from district to country to continental levels. Our results show that when locally applicable extinction thresholds are used, only three countries are likely to meet the goal of LF elimination by 2020 using currently applied mass drug treatments, and that switching to more intensive drug regimens, increasing the frequency of treatments, or switching to new triple drug regimens will be required if LF elimination is to be accelerated in Africa. The proportion of countries that would meet the goal of eliminating LF by 2020 may, however, reach up to 24/36 if the WHO 1% microfilaremia prevalence threshold is used and sequential mass drug deliveries are applied in countries.ConclusionsWe have developed and applied a data-driven spatially hierarchical computational platform that uses the discovery of locally applicable transmission models in order to predict the prospects for eliminating the macroparasitic disease, LF, at the coarser country level in sub-Saharan Africa. We show that fine-scale spatial heterogeneity in local parasite transmission and extinction dynamics, as well as the exact nature of intervention roll-outs in countries, will impact the timelines to achieving national LF elimination on this continent.

Highlights

  • There are growing demands for predicting the prospects of achieving the global elimination of neglected tropical diseases as a result of the institution of large-scale nation-wide intervention programs by the WHOset target year of 2020

  • We have developed and applied a data-driven spatially hierarchical computational platform that uses the discovery of locally applicable transmission models in order to predict the prospects for eliminating the macroparasitic disease, lymphatic filariasis (LF), at the coarser country level in sub-Saharan Africa

  • The corresponding predictions of overall mf prevalences and annual biting rate (ABR) from the model fits to each age profile of infection are shown in Fig. 3b and c, respectively; these results highlight how our modeling approach can allow estimation of LF infection patterns and ABR inputs for a site, and how we may use the model outputs to learn about which specific type of model may capture the dynamics of parasite transmission in a particular locality

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Summary

Introduction

There are growing demands for predicting the prospects of achieving the global elimination of neglected tropical diseases as a result of the institution of large-scale nation-wide intervention programs by the WHOset target year of 2020. There has been increasing interest in assessing the prospects of currently applied and proposed nationwide interventions for achieving the global elimination or control of the major preventable helminthic diseases, ranging from soil-transmitted helminthiases to schistosomiasis, onchocerciasis, and lymphatic filariasis (LF) [1,2,3,4,5] This is in response to the urgent policy demands for more accurate scientific information for determining if the roadmap set by the World Health Organization (WHO), based on sustaining and expanding drug access programs, will accomplish the elimination or control of these neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) by the target year of 2020 [6]. Such predictions will significantly underestimate the full range of heterogeneity in infection dynamics and the outcomes of interventions across a spatial domain [19]

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