4.5 Article

Differential characteristics of primary infection and re-infection can cause backward bifurcation in HCV transmission dynamics

Journal

MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES
Volume 263, Issue -, Pages 51-69

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.mbs.2015.02.002

Keywords

HCV; Backward bifurcation; Reproduction number; Stability

Funding

  1. University of Manitoba
  2. Manitoba Graduate Scholarship
  3. NSERC of Canada

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Backward bifurcation, a phenomenon typically characterized by the co-existence of multiple stable equilibria when the associated reproduction number of the model is less than unity, has been observed in numerous disease transmission models. This study establishes, for the first time, the presence of this phenomenon in the transmission dynamics of hepatitis C virus (HCV) within an IDU population. It is shown that the phenomenon does not exist under four scenarios, namely (i) in the absence of re-infection, (ii) in the absence of differential characteristics of HCV infection (with respect to infectivity, progression, treatment and recovery) between re-infected individuals and primary-infected individuals, (iii) when re-infected and treated individuals do not transmit HCV infection and (iv) when the average infectivity-adjusted duration of re-infection is less than that of primary infection. This study identifies, using sensitivity analysis, five parameters of the model that have the most influence on the disease transmission dynamics, namely: effective contact rate, progression rate from acute to chronic infection, recovery rate from acute infection, natural death rate and the relative infectiousness of chronically-infected individuals. Numerical simulations of the model show that the reinfection of recovered individuals has marginal effect on the HCV burden (as measured in terms of the cumulative incidence and the prevalence of the disease) in the IDU community. Furthermore, treatment of infected IDUs, even for small rate (such as 4%), offers significant impact on curtailing HCV spread in the community. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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