Inferring Epidemic Contact Structure from Phylogenetic Trees


Date

2012-03-08

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

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Data

Abstract

Contact structure is believed to have a large impact on epidemic spreading and consequently using networks to model such contact structure continues to gain interest in epidemiology. However, detailed knowledge of the exact contact structure underlying real epidemics is limited. Here we address the question whether the structure of the contact network leaves a detectable genetic fingerprint in the pathogen population. To this end we compare phylogenies generated by disease outbreaks in simulated populations with different types of contact networks. We find that the shape of these phylogenies strongly depends on contact structure. In particular, measures of tree imbalance allow us to quantify to what extent the contact structure underlying an epidemic deviates from a null model contact network and illustrate this in the case of random mixing. Using a phylogeny from the Swiss HIV epidemic, we show that this epidemic has a significantly more unbalanced tree than would be expected from random mixing.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

8 (3)

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

PLOS

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Organisational unit

09490 - Stadler, Tanja / Stadler, Tanja check_circle
03584 - Bonhoeffer, Sebastian / Bonhoeffer, Sebastian check_circle

Notes

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