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Influenza drift and epidemic size: the race between generating and escaping immunity
Authors:Boni Maciej F  Gog Julia R  Andreasen Viggo  Christiansen Freddy B
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK. maciek@charles.stanford.edu
Abstract:
Influenza in humans is characterised by strongly annual dynamics and antigenic evolution leading to partial escape from prior host immunity. The variability of new epidemic strains depends on the amount of virus currently circulating. In this paper, the amount of antigenic variation produced each year is dependent on the epidemic size. Our model reduces to a one-dimensional map and a full mathematical analysis is presented. This simple system suggests some basic principles which may be more generally applicable. In particular, for diseases with antigenic drift, vaccination may be doubly beneficial. Not only does it protect the population through classical herd immunity, but the overall case reduction reduces the chance of new variants being produced; hence, subsequent epidemics may be milder as a result of this positive feedback. Also, a disease with a high innate rate of antigenic variation will always be able to invade a susceptible population, whereas a disease with less potential for variation may require several introduction events to become endemic.
Keywords:Influenza   Antigenic drift   Cross-immunity   Herd immunity   Annual epidemics   Pathogen invasion   Evolutionary epidemiology
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