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Co-infections determine patterns of mortality in a population exposed to parasite infection

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Title Co-infections determine patterns of mortality in a population exposed to parasite infection
 
Creator Woolhouse, Mark E.J.
Thumbi, S.M.
Jennings, A.
Chase-Topping, M.
Callaby, R.
Kiara, Henry K.
Oosthuizen, M.C.
Mbole-Kariuki, Mary N.
Conradie, I.
Handel, I.G.
Poole, Elizabeth J.
Njiiri, E.
Collins, N.E.
Murray, G.
Tapio, M.
Auguet, O.T.
Weir, W.
Morrison, W. Ivan
Kruuk, L.E.B.
Bronsvoort, B.M. de C.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Coetzer, K.
Toye, Philip G.
 
Subject animal diseases
 
Description Many individual hosts are infected with multiple parasite species, and this may increase or decrease the pathogenicity of the infections. This phenomenon is termed heterologous reactivity and is potentially an important determinant of both patterns of morbidity and mortality and of the impact of disease control measures at the population level. Using infections with Theileria parva (a tick-borne protozoan, related to Plasmodium) in indigenous African cattle [where it causes East Coast fever (ECF)] as a model system, we obtain the first quantitative estimate of the effects of heterologous reactivity for any parasitic disease. In individual calves, concurrent co-infection with less pathogenic species of Theileria resulted in an 89% reduction in mortality associated with T. parva infection. Across our study population, this corresponds to a net reduction in mortality due to ECF of greater than 40%. Using a mathematical model, we demonstrate that this degree of heterologous protection provides a unifying explanation for apparently disparate epidemiological patterns: variable disease-induced mortality rates, age-mortality profiles, weak correlations between the incidence of infection and disease (known as endemic stability), and poor efficacy of interventions that reduce exposure to multiple parasite species. These findings can be generalized to many other infectious diseases, including human malaria, and illustrate how co-infections can play a key role in determining population-level patterns of morbidity and mortality due to parasite infections.
 
Date 2015-03-06
2015-03-23T09:05:30Z
2015-03-23T09:05:30Z
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Woolhouse, M.E.J., Thumbi, S.M., Jennings, A., Chase-Topping, M., Callaby, R., Kiara, H., Oosthuizen, M.C., Mbole-Kariuki, M.N., Conradie, I., Handel, I.G., Poole, E.J., Njiiri, E., Collins, N.E., Murray, G., Tapio, M. Auguet, O.T., Weir, W., Morrison, W.I., Kruuk, L.E.B., Bronsvoort, B. M. de C. Hanotte, O., Coetzer, K., Toye, P.G. 2015. Co-infections determine patterns of mortality in a population exposed to parasite infection. Science Advances 1(2): e1400026
2375-2548
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/59824
http://advances.sciencemag.org/content/1/2/e1400026
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.1400026
 
Language en
 
Rights Open Access
 
Publisher American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
 
Source Science Advances