传递率(结构动力学)
奥司他韦
生物
抗药性
人口
病毒学
甲型流感病毒
大流行
H5N1亚型流感病毒
固定(群体遗传学)
病毒
拉伤
传输(电信)
遗传学
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)
医学
传染病(医学专业)
基因
计算机科学
物理
疾病
环境卫生
隔振
量子力学
病理
解剖
振动
电信
作者
Dennis L. Chao,Jesse D. Bloom,Beth F. Kochin,Rustom Antia,Ira M. Longini
标识
DOI:10.1098/rsif.2011.0427
摘要
Resistance to oseltamivir, the most widely used influenza antiviral drug, spread to fixation in seasonal influenza A(H1N1) between 2006 and 2009. This sudden rise in resistance seemed puzzling given the low overall level of the oseltamivir usage and the lack of a correlation between local rates of resistance and oseltamivir usage. We used a stochastic simulation model and deterministic approximations to examine how such events can occur, and in particular to determine how the rate of fixation of the resistant strain depends both on its fitness in untreated hosts as well as the frequency of antiviral treatment. We found that, for the levels of antiviral usage in the population, the resistant strain will eventually spread to fixation, if it is not attenuated in transmissibility relative to the drug-sensitive strain, but not at the speed observed in seasonal H1N1. The extreme speed with which the resistance spread in seasonal H1N1 suggests that the resistant strain had a transmission advantage in untreated hosts, and this could have arisen from genetic hitchhiking, or from the mutations responsible for resistance and compensation. Importantly, our model also shows that resistant virus will fail to spread if it is even slightly less transmissible than its sensitive counterpart—a finding of relevance given that resistant pandemic influenza (H1N1) 2009 may currently suffer from a small, but nonetheless experimentally perceptible reduction in transmissibility.
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