Region-wide synchrony and traveling waves of dengue across eight countries in Southeast Asia

Author:

van Panhuis Willem G.,Choisy Marc,Xiong Xin,Chok Nian Shong,Akarasewi Pasakorn,Iamsirithaworn Sopon,Lam Sai K.,Chong Chee K.,Lam Fook C.,Phommasak Bounlay,Vongphrachanh Phengta,Bouaphanh Khamphaphongphane,Rekol Huy,Hien Nguyen Tran,Thai Pham Quang,Duong Tran Nhu,Chuang Jen-Hsiang,Liu Yu-Lun,Ng Lee-Ching,Shi Yuan,Tayag Enrique A.,Roque Vito G.,Lee Suy Lyndon L.,Jarman Richard G.,Gibbons Robert V.,Velasco John Mark S.,Yoon In-Kyu,Burke Donald S.,Cummings Derek A. T.

Abstract

Dengue is a mosquito-transmitted virus infection that causes epidemics of febrile illness and hemorrhagic fever across the tropics and subtropics worldwide. Annual epidemics are commonly observed, but there is substantial spatiotemporal heterogeneity in intensity. A better understanding of this heterogeneity in dengue transmission could lead to improved epidemic prediction and disease control. Time series decomposition methods enable the isolation and study of temporal epidemic dynamics with a specific periodicity (e.g., annual cycles related to climatic drivers and multiannual cycles caused by dynamics in population immunity). We collected and analyzed up to 18 y of monthly dengue surveillance reports on a total of 3.5 million reported dengue cases from 273 provinces in eight countries in Southeast Asia, covering ∼107 km2. We detected strong patterns of synchronous dengue transmission across the entire region, most markedly during a period of high incidence in 1997–1998, which was followed by a period of extremely low incidence in 2001–2002. This synchrony in dengue incidence coincided with elevated temperatures throughout the region in 1997–1998 and the strongest El Niño episode of the century. Multiannual dengue cycles (2–5 y) were highly coherent with the Oceanic Niño Index, and synchrony of these cycles increased with temperature. We also detected localized traveling waves of multiannual dengue epidemic cycles in Thailand, Laos, and the Philippines that were dependent on temperature. This study reveals forcing mechanisms that drive synchronization of dengue epidemics on a continental scale across Southeast Asia.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Institut Pengurusan dan Pemantauan Penyelidika, Universiti Malaya

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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