Abstract
AbstractThe magnitude of influenza epidemics is largely determined by the number of susceptible individuals at the start of the influenza season. Susceptibility, in turn, is influenced by antigenic drift. The evolution of influenza’s B-cell epitopes has been charted thoroughly, and only recently evidence for T-cell driven evolution is accumulating. We investigate the relation between susceptibility to influenza, and antigenic drift at CD8+ T-cell epitopes over a 45-year timespan. We estimate age-specific susceptibility with data reported by general practitioners, using a disease-transmission model in a Bayesian framework. We find large variation in susceptibility, both between seasons and age classes. Although it is often assumed that antigenic drift drives the variation in susceptibility, we do not find evidence for a relation between drift and susceptibility in our data. This suggests that other factors determining the variation in susceptibility play a dominating role, or that complex influenza-infection histories obscure any direct effects.Preface to this bioRχiv pre-printWe are currently in the process of making this manuscript ready for re-submission, and are resolving some issues brought forward by our referees. Most importantly, we aim to better incorporate the co-circulation of the various influenza A and B subtypes during the different seasons, both in the estimation of susceptibility and antigenic drift.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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