AI Article Synopsis

  • Coccidioidomycosis, or Valley fever, is a rising infectious disease caused by inhaling fungal spores from Coccidioides, whose endemic region is expanding due to climate change.
  • Traditional case data for Valley fever is flawed due to issues like false positives and underreporting, making it unreliable for assessing Coccidioides endemicity.
  • A new Bayesian model was proposed to estimate Coccidioides endemicity in the western U.S., revealing high endemicity in states like California and Arizona, while also addressing detection variability linked to environmental factors like precipitation and agriculture.

Article Abstract

Coccidioidomycosis, or Valley fever, is an infectious disease caused by inhaling Coccidioides fungal spores. Incidence has risen in recent years, and it is believed the endemic region for Coccidioides is expanding in response to climate change. While Valley fever case data can help us understand trends in disease risk, using case data as a proxy for Coccidioides endemicity is not ideal because case data suffers from imperfect detection, including false positives (e.g., travel-related cases reported outside of endemic area) and false negatives (e.g., misdiagnosis or underreporting). We proposed a Bayesian, spatio-temporal occupancy model to relate monthly, county-level presence/absence data on Valley fever cases to latent endemicity of Coccidioides, accounting for imperfect detection. We used our model to estimate endemicity in the western United States. We estimated high probability of endemicity in southern California, Arizona, and New Mexico, but also in regions without mandated reporting, including western Texas, eastern Colorado, and southeastern Washington. We also quantified spatio-temporal variability in detectability of Valley fever, given an area is endemic to Coccidioides. We estimated an inverse relationship between lagged 3- and 9-month precipitation and case detection, and a positive association with agriculture. This work can help inform public health surveillance needs and identify areas that would benefit from mandatory case reporting.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwae199DOI Listing

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