Linking rattiness, geography and environmental degradation to spillover Leptospira infections in marginalised urban settings: An eco-epidemiological community-based cohort study in Brazil

Author:

Eyre Max T12ORCID,Souza Fábio N3ORCID,Carvalho-Pereira Ticiana SA3ORCID,Nery Nivison3,de Oliveira Daiana3,Cruz Jaqueline S3,Sacramento Gielson A3,Khalil Hussein34,Wunder Elsio A56ORCID,Hacker Kathryn P7,Hagan José E8,Childs James E56,Reis Mitermayer G35,Begon Mike9,Diggle Peter J1,Ko Albert I56ORCID,Giorgi Emanuele1ORCID,Costa Federico1356

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Health Informatics, Computing, and Statistics, Lancaster University Medical School

2. Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

3. Institute of Collective Health, Federal University of Bahia

4. Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

5. Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Brazilian Ministry of Health

6. Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases, Yale School of Public Health

7. University of Pennsylvania

8. World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Office for Europe

9. Department of Evolution, Ecology and Behaviour, University of Liverpool

Abstract

Background:Zoonotic spillover from animal reservoirs is responsible for a significant global public health burden, but the processes that promote spillover events are poorly understood in complex urban settings. Endemic transmission of Leptospira, the agent of leptospirosis, in marginalised urban communities occurs through human exposure to an environment contaminated by bacteria shed in the urine of the rat reservoir. However, it is unclear to what extent transmission is driven by variation in the distribution of rats or by the dispersal of bacteria in rainwater runoff and overflow from open sewer systems.Methods:We conducted an eco-epidemiological study in a high-risk community in Salvador, Brazil, by prospectively following a cohort of 1401 residents to ascertain serological evidence for leptospiral infections. A concurrent rat ecology study was used to collect information on the fine-scale spatial distribution of ‘rattiness’, our proxy for rat abundance and exposure of interest. We developed and applied a novel geostatistical framework for joint spatial modelling of multiple indices of disease reservoir abundance and human infection risk.Results:The estimated infection rate was 51.4 (95%CI 40.4, 64.2) infections per 1000 follow-up events. Infection risk increased with age until 30 years of age and was associated with male gender. Rattiness was positively associated with infection risk for residents across the entire study area, but this effect was stronger in higher elevation areas (OR 3.27 95% CI 1.68, 19.07) than in lower elevation areas (OR 1.14 95% CI 1.05, 1.53).Conclusions:These findings suggest that, while frequent flooding events may disperse bacteria in regions of low elevation, environmental risk in higher elevation areas is more localised and directly driven by the distribution of local rat populations. The modelling framework developed may have broad applications in delineating complex animal-environment-human interactions during zoonotic spillover and identifying opportunities for public health intervention.Funding:This work was supported by the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation and Secretariat of Health Surveillance, Brazilian Ministry of Health, the National Institutes of Health of the United States (grant numbers F31 AI114245, R01 AI052473, U01 AI088752, R01 TW009504 and R25 TW009338); the Wellcome Trust (102330/Z/13/Z), and by the Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado da Bahia (FAPESB/JCB0020/2016). MTE was supported by a Medical Research UK doctorate studentship. FBS participated in this study under a FAPESB doctorate scholarship.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Medical Research Council

Wellcome Trust

Fundação Oswaldo Cruz

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado da Bahia

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

Reference70 articles.

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