Invasion of two tick-borne diseases across New England: harnessing human surveillance data to capture underlying ecological invasion processes

Proc Biol Sci. 2016 Jun 15;283(1832):20160834. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2016.0834.

Abstract

Modelling the spatial spread of vector-borne zoonotic pathogens maintained in enzootic transmission cycles remains a major challenge. The best available spatio-temporal data on pathogen spread often take the form of human disease surveillance data. By applying a classic ecological approach-occupancy modelling-to an epidemiological question of disease spread, we used surveillance data to examine the latent ecological invasion of tick-borne pathogens. Over the last half-century, previously undescribed tick-borne pathogens including the agents of Lyme disease and human babesiosis have rapidly spread across the northeast United States. Despite their epidemiological importance, the mechanisms of tick-borne pathogen invasion and drivers underlying the distinct invasion trajectories of the co-vectored pathogens remain unresolved. Our approach allowed us to estimate the unobserved ecological processes underlying pathogen spread while accounting for imperfect detection of human cases. Our model predicts that tick-borne diseases spread in a diffusion-like manner with occasional long-distance dispersal and that babesiosis spread exhibits strong dependence on Lyme disease.

Keywords: Lyme disease; babesiosis; invasion; occupancy model; tick-borne disease.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Babesiosis / epidemiology
  • Humans
  • Ixodes
  • Lyme Disease / epidemiology
  • New England / epidemiology
  • Population Surveillance*
  • Tick-Borne Diseases / epidemiology*

Associated data

  • Dryad/10.5061/dryad.fs348