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Methods of modelling viral disease dynamics across the within- and between-host scales: the impact of virus dose on host population immunity
Authors:Shelby H. Steinmeyer  Claus O. Wilke  Kim M. Pepin
Affiliation:1.Department of Mathematics, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA;2.Section of Integrative Biology, Center for Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, and Institute for Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA;3.Department of Physics, Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA
Abstract:We study the epidemiology of a viral disease with dose-dependent replication and transmission by nesting a differential-equation model of the within-host viral dynamics inside a between-host epidemiological model. We use two complementary approaches for nesting the models: an agent-based (AB) simulation and a mean-field approximation called the growth-matrix (GM) model. We find that although infection rates and predicted case loads are somewhat different between the AB and GM models, several epidemiological parameters, e.g. mean immunity in the population and mean dose received, behave similarly across the methods. Further, through a comparison of our dose-dependent replication model against two control models that uncouple dose-dependent replication from transmission, we find that host immunity in a population after an epidemic is qualitatively different than when transmission depends on time-varying viral abundances within hosts. These results show that within-host dynamics and viral dose should not be neglected in epidemiological models, and that the simpler GM approach to model nesting provides a reasonable tradeoff between model complexity and accuracy of results.
Keywords:viral dynamics   within-host   dose
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