The timing and targeting of treatment in influenza pandemics influences the emergence of resistance in structured populations

Antiviral resistance in influenza is rampant and has the possibility of causing major morbidity and mortality. Previous models have identified treatment regimes to minimize total infections and keep resistance low. However, the bulk of these studies have ignored stochasticity and heterogeneous conta...

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Published inPLoS computational biology Vol. 9; no. 2; p. e1002912
Main Authors Althouse, Benjamin M, Patterson-Lomba, Oscar, Goerg, Georg M, Hébert-Dufresne, Laurent
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 01.02.2013
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:Antiviral resistance in influenza is rampant and has the possibility of causing major morbidity and mortality. Previous models have identified treatment regimes to minimize total infections and keep resistance low. However, the bulk of these studies have ignored stochasticity and heterogeneous contact structures. Here we develop a network model of influenza transmission with treatment and resistance, and present both standard mean-field approximations as well as simulated dynamics. We find differences in the final epidemic sizes for identical transmission parameters (bistability) leading to different optimal treatment timing depending on the number initially infected. We also find, contrary to previous results, that treatment targeted by number of contacts per individual (node degree) gives rise to more resistance at lower levels of treatment than non-targeted treatment. Finally we highlight important differences between the two methods of analysis (mean-field versus stochastic simulations), and show where traditional mean-field approximations fail. Our results have important implications not only for the timing and distribution of influenza chemotherapy, but also for mathematical epidemiological modeling in general. Antiviral resistance in influenza may carry large consequences for pandemic mitigation efforts, and models ignoring contact heterogeneity and stochasticity may provide misleading policy recommendations.
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Conceived and designed the experiments: BMA, OPL, GMG, LHD. Performed the experiments: BMA, OPL, LHD. Analyzed the data: BMA, OPL, GMG, LHD. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: BMA, OPL, GMG, LHD. Wrote the paper: BMA, OPL, GMG, LHD.
The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
ISSN:1553-7358
1553-734X
1553-7358
DOI:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002912