Immune amnesia induced by measles and its effects on concurrent epidemics
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Royal Society
Materia
Epidemic spreading Dynamics on networks Phase transitions Immune amnesia
Date
2021-06-16Referencia bibliográfica
Morales GB, Muñoz MA. 2021 Immune amnesia induced by measles and its effects on concurrent epidemics. J. R. Soc. Interface 18: 20210153. [https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2021.0153]
Sponsorship
Spanish Government; Agencia Estatal de investigacion (AEI) FIS2017-84256-P; Junta de Andalucia; European Commission A-FQM-175-UGR18 SOMM17/6105/UGRAbstract
It has been recently discovered that the measles virus can damage pre-existing
immunological memory, destroying B lymphocytes and reducing the
diversity of non-specific B cells of the infected host. In particular, this implies
that previously acquired immunization from vaccination or direct exposition
to other pathogens could be partially erased in a phenomenon named
‘immune amnesia’, whose effects can become particularly worrisome
given the actual rise of anti-vaccination movements. Here, we present the
first attempt to incorporate immune amnesia into standard models of epidemic
spreading by proposing a simple model for the spreading of two
concurrent pathogens causing measles and another generic disease.
Different analyses confirm that immune amnesia can have important consequences
for epidemic spreading, significantly altering the vaccination
coverage required to reach herd immunity. We also uncover the existence
of novel propagating and endemic phases induced by immune amnesia.
Finally, we discuss the meaning and consequences of our results and their
relation with, e.g. immunization strategies, together with the possibility
that explosive types of transitions may emerge, making immune-amnesia
effects particularly dramatic. This work opens the door to further developments
and analyses of immune-amnesia effects, contributing also to the
theory of interacting epidemics on complex networks.