Abstract

Human cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a herpes virus with poorly understood transmission dynamics. Person-to-person transmission is thought to occur primarily through transfer of saliva or urine, but no quantitative estimates are available for the contribution of different infection routes. Using data from a large population-based serological study (n = 5,179), we provide quantitative estimates of key epidemiological parameters, including the transmissibility of primary infection, reactivation, and re-infection. Mixture models are fitted to age- and sex-specific antibody response data from the Netherlands, showing that the data can be described by a model with three distributions of antibody measurements, i.e. uninfected, infected, and infected with increased antibody concentration. Estimates of seroprevalence increase gradually with age, such that at 80 years 73% (95%CrI: 64%-78%) of females and 62% (95%CrI: 55%-68%) of males are infected, while 57% (95%CrI: 47%-67%) of females and 37% (95%CrI: 28%-46%) of males have increased antibody concentration. Merging the statistical analyses with transmission models, we find that models with infectious reactivation (i.e. reactivation that can lead to the virus being transmitted to a novel host) fit the data significantly better than models without infectious reactivation. Estimated reactivation rates increase from low values in children to 2%-4% per year in women older than 50 years. The results advance a hypothesis in which transmission from adults after infectious reactivation is a key driver of transmission. We discuss the implications for control strategies aimed at reducing CMV infection in vulnerable groups.

Highlights

  • Human cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a highly prevalent herpesvirus that infects between 30% and 100% of persons in populations throughout the world [1]

  • Infectious reactivation of cytomegalovirus transfer of saliva or urine, but little quantitative evidence is available about the transmission dynamics

  • The analyses show that infectious reactivation is essential to explain the data

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Summary

Introduction

Human cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a highly prevalent herpesvirus that infects between 30% and 100% of persons in populations throughout the world [1]. The only population-level data derive from serological studies, aiming to uncover which part of the population is infected at what age. These studies show that i) a sizable fraction of infants is infected perinatally (before 6 months of age), ii) seroprevalence increases gradually with age and is usually higher in females than in males, and iii) the probability of seropositivity is associated with both ethnicity and socioeconomic status, with non-western ethnicity and lower socioeconomic status being associated with higher rates of seropositivity [1, 18,19,20,21]

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