Characterizing tuberculosis transmission dynamics in high-burden urban and rural settings

Author:

Smith Jonathan P.,Oeltmann John E.,Hill Andrew N.,Tobias James L.,Boyd Rosanna,Click Eleanor S.,Finlay Alyssa,Mondongo Chawangwa,Zetola Nicola M.,Moonan Patrick K.

Abstract

AbstractMycobacterium tuberculosis transmission dynamics in high-burden settings are poorly understood. Growing evidence suggests transmission may be characterized by extensive individual heterogeneity in secondary cases (i.e., superspreading), yet the degree and influence of such heterogeneity is largely unknown and unmeasured in high burden-settings. We conducted a prospective, population-based molecular epidemiology study of TB transmission in both an urban and rural setting of Botswana, one of the highest TB burden countries in the world. We used these empirical data to fit two mathematical models (urban and rural) that jointly quantified both the effective reproductive number, $$R$$ R , and the propensity for superspreading in each population. We found both urban and rural populations were characterized by a high degree of individual heterogeneity, however such heterogeneity disproportionately impacted the rural population: 99% of secondary transmission was attributed to only 19% of infectious cases in the rural population compared to 60% in the urban population and the median number of incident cases until the first outbreak of 30 cases was only 32 for the rural model compared to 791 in the urban model. These findings suggest individual heterogeneity plays a critical role shaping local TB epidemiology within subpopulations.

Funder

Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference56 articles.

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