PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

When vaccines are imperfect

What math can tell us about their effects on disease propagation

2014-11-20
(Press-News.org) Philadelphia, PA--The control of certain childhood diseases is difficult, despite high vaccination coverage in many countries. One of the possible reasons for this is "imperfect vaccines," that is, vaccines that fail either due to "leakiness," lack of effectiveness on certain individuals in a population, or shorter duration of potency. In a paper publishing today in the SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics, authors Felicia Magpantay, Maria Riolo, Matthieu Domenech de Celles, Aaron King, and Pejman Rohani use a mathematical model to determine the consequences of vaccine failure and resulting disease dynamics.

"We examined the effects of individual-level vaccine failure on the propagation of a disease through a population," says author Felicia Magpantay. "Specifically, we took into account different ways in which vaccines may fail. We distinguished between vaccine-induced immunity that is 'leaky', whereby vaccination reduces the probability of infection upon exposure but does not eliminate it; 'all-or-nothing', which leads to perfect protection in some individuals, but none in others; and 'waning', which reflects transient protection--or some combination of all three." While leakiness, degree and duration of coverage have direct effects at the individual level, the protection from imperfect vaccines and reduced disease transmission at the population level is not easy to determine. "By carefully ensuring a like-with-like comparison of the differences in the mechanism of vaccine failure, we identified distinct epidemiological signatures at the population-level and explored their implications for disease control," Magpantay explains.

The group of professional applied mathematicians considers a systematic analysis based on the "susceptible-infectious-recovered" model used in epidemiological studies. This model allows one to calculate the number of susceptible, infectious and recovered individuals in a population, factoring in infection and recovery rates as well as contact between susceptible and infected individuals. The authors adapt this model with an added vaccine component to compare the dynamics of the three aforementioned types of imperfect vaccines. The critical proportion of the model population that needs to be vaccinated in order to drive the disease to extinction is seen to be the same in all three cases. When vaccination coverage is maintained below the critical ratio, the disease remains endemic in the population at a higher level for leaky vaccines, compared to the other two imperfect vaccines. "Among vaccines that exhibit the same level of individual-level effectiveness, the purely leaky vaccine always leads to the highest prevalence of infection in the long run. The purely all-or-nothing and purely waning vaccines lead to the same levels of prevalence," Magpantay elaborates.

The authors then extend their ordinary differential equation model to account for age distribution in the population using a system of partial differential equations for age-specific transmission. "The age distribution of the infected class depends on the type of vaccine failure, the age-specific contact rates and the vaccine coverage. In the cases that we have considered, the waning vaccine leads to the highest mean age of first infection," Magpantay says. The authors also show that the three imperfect vaccines have distinct transient dynamics following the initiation of vaccination in a population. "Numerical simulations suggest that vaccination with leaky and waning vaccines can bring about a long honeymoon period: a temporary period of low disease prevalence after the onset of mass vaccination," Magpantay explains. "This provides an alternative explanation for the observed resurgence of some diseases like pertussis in regions that maintain high vaccination coverage." All-or-nothing vaccines appear to show a more stable transition.

Topics for future work include examining the role of seasonality on transmission rates as well as the effect of a vaccine on infectiousness of an individual.

INFORMATION:

Source Article: Epidemiological Consequences of Imperfect Vaccines for Immunizing Infections

[The above link is not active till the paper is published - please contact karthika@siam.org if you would like to view the full paper] SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics, 74 (6), 1810-1830 (Online publish date: November 20, 2014, 4:00 pm)

About the authors: Felicia Magpantay, Maria Riolo, and Matthieu Domenech de Celles are postdoctoral fellows in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Michigan. Aaron King is a professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Department of Mathematics and the Center for the Study of Complex Systems at the University of Michigan. Pejman Rohani is a professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Department of Epidemiology and Center for the Study of Complex Systems at the University of Michigan.

If you would like to schedule a direct interview with the paper's authors, please email karthika@siam.org.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New survey of employers about the health insurance market

2014-11-20
A new nationally representative survey of employers--the largest purchasers of health care in the country-- shows that most are unfamiliar with objective metrics of health plan quality information. The survey, conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, also found that employers are looking to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) as they make significant decisions on the benefits they offer, with the costs of health plans as a key consideration. Funding for the survey was provided by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. "There appears to be a serious ...

Time-lapse photos and synched weather data unlock Antarctic secrets

2014-11-20
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] -- In preparation for his upcoming fieldwork, Brown University research analyst Jay Dickson took 10,000 pictures of the inside of his freezer. He wasn't investigating disappearing food or making sure the light went off when he closed the door. Dickson was making sure his new camera and timer would function properly for long periods in sub-freezing temperatures. "Everything worked great in the freezer for five weeks," Dickson said, "so hopefully it will all work in the field." That camera's next stop: a remote Antarctic outpost, where ...

New study: Aggressive conifer removal benefits Sierra aspen

2014-11-20
Chester, CA-- A study just published by Point Blue Conservation Science shows the benefits of an aggressive approach to restoring Sierra Nevada aspen stands (Populus tremuloides). Most of the aspen stands that dotted the Sierra Nevada less than a century ago are gone or in poor health. Aspen stands can increase groundwater, enrich soils and support a higher diversity of plants and wildlife, relative to adjacent forest types. Keeping aspen stands as part of our forests is critical to maintaining a healthy Sierra Nevada forest ecosystem for people and wildlife. The ...

UC Irvine-Italian researchers create first inhibitor for enzyme linked to cancers

UC Irvine-Italian researchers create first inhibitor for enzyme linked to cancers
2014-11-20
Irvine, Calif., Nov. 20, 2014 -- Recent studies showing acid ceramidase (AC) to be upregulated in melanoma, lung and prostate cancers have made the enzyme a desired target for novel synthetic inhibitor compounds. This week in Angewandte Chemie, a top journal in chemistry, UC Irvine and Italian Institute of Technology scientists describe the very first class of AC inhibitors that may aid in the efficacy of chemotherapies. AC, which is encoded by the ASAH1 gene, plays an important role in the regulation of cell fate, setting the balance between pro-aging/death and pro-life ...

Cost of meeting basic needs rising faster than wages in Washington state

2014-11-20
A Washington family of four must spend 46 percent more on average to make ends meet today than 13 years ago, according to a new report from the University of Washington. The Self-Sufficiency Standard for Washington State 2014, released Thursday (Nov. 20), provides a sobering look at how much it costs individuals and families statewide to meet basic needs -- and how far short they're falling. The study found that Washington families with two adults, a preschooler and a school-aged child saw the costs of meeting their most basic requirements jump as much as 72 percent ...

Discovery sheds light on nuclear reactor fuel behavior during a severe event

2014-11-20
A new discovery about the atomic structure of uranium dioxide will help scientists select the best computational model to simulate severe nuclear reactor accidents. Using the Advanced Photon Source (APS), a Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility, researchers from DOE's Argonne National Laboratory and Brookhaven National Laboratory, along with Materials Development, Inc., Stony Brook University, and Carnegie Institution of Washington, found that the atomic structure of uranium dioxide (UO2) changes significantly when it melts. UO2 is the primary ...

Economic burden of prediabetes up 74 percent over five years

2014-11-20
The economic burden of diabetes in America continues to climb, exceeding more than $322 billion in excess medical costs and lost productivity in 2012, or more than $1,000 for every American, according to a study being published in the December issue of Diabetes Care that also includes a state-by-state breakdown of the prevalence and costs associated with diabetes. Additionally, increased costs associated with prediabetes and undiagnosed diabetes highlight the growing importance of prevention and early intervention. The study, which follows up on a similar report published ...

Moffitt researchers use evolutionary principles to model cancer mutations

2014-11-20
TAMPA, Fla. - Moffitt Cancer Center researchers are taking a unique approach to understanding and investigating cancer by utilizing evolutionary principles and computational modeling to examine the role of specific genetic mutations in the Darwinian struggle among tumor and normal cells during cancer growth. Cells become malignant by acquiring genetic mutations that lead to increased survival and reproduction. Many researchers in the past have viewed cancer progression as the result of unlimited accumulation of these genetic mutations. However, Moffitt researchers ...

Study: Obesity fuels silent heart damage

2014-11-20
Fast facts: The study shows that obesity leads to subclinical heart muscle injury and increases the risk for heart failure even among people without overt heart disease and independently of other cardiovascular risk factors such as diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol. The silent heart damage was detected by using an ultrasensitive test that measures the levels of a protein released by the cells of the heart muscle during injury. The findings suggest that obesity is an independent driver of heart muscle damage, and that obese individuals, even when free ...

Mass. General-developed system reveals how our brains and bodies change as we fall asleep

Mass. General-developed system reveals how our brains and bodies change as we fall asleep
2014-11-20
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators have developed a system to accurately track the dynamic process of falling asleep, something has not been possible with existing techniques. In their report in the October issue of the open-access journal PLOS Computational Biology, the research team describes how combining key physiologic measurements with a behavioral task that does not interfere with sleep onset gives a better picture of the gradual process of falling asleep. In addition to being a powerful tool for future research, the system could provide valuable ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Conservative oxygen therapy in mechanically ventilated critically ill adult patients

Molecular hopscotch boosts light upconversion

Prolonged use of desogestrel pill linked to small increased brain tumour risk

Doctors raise concern over rise in recreational ketamine use

New index ranks 917 European cities on urban design for health and well-being

Exposure to pollution during pregnancy linked with changes in fetal brain structures

New way of measuring blood pressure could be a lifeline for thousands of people

Famous Ice Age ‘puppies’ likely wolf cubs and not dogs, study shows

Leg amputation caused by arterial disease four times higher in disadvantaged areas

Researchers solve ultrasound imaging problem using seismology technique

Among new dads, 64% take less than two weeks of leave after baby is born

Decades-old mystery of AlCl dipole moment resolved

Stroke, dementia more common in people with biomarker of aging

Shorter telomeres linked to increased risk of age-related brain diseases

Calling for renewed Israeli-Palestinian health cooperation

Rutgers health researchers challenge FDA warning on common epilepsy drug

In the belly of the beast: massive clumps reveal star factories from a bygone era of the cosmos

NASA’s Webb ‘UNCOVERs’ galaxy population driving cosmic renovation

Is your gut microbiome a calorie ‘super harvester’?

Some dog breeds are more likely to get diarrhea

Structural brain differences found in kids who experienced prenatal Superstorm Sandy exposure

Mapping patient satisfaction across U.S. hospitals reveals the Midwest as the leading region

Ladybirds' complex colors may result from a combination of pigments and physical properties of their wingcase

Exposure to multiple extreme climate events during pregnancy may have a cumulative effect on child brain development

Single-material electronic skin gives robots the human touch

What’s in a name? New research catalogues how birds are categorized by what we call them

Global mercury levels in rivers have doubled since Industrial Revolution

New ‘molecular GPS’ will fast-track drug discovery

Photonic processor could streamline 6G wireless signal processing

Scientists uncover insights into the origins of antibodies to peanut

[Press-News.org] When vaccines are imperfect
What math can tell us about their effects on disease propagation