AI Article Synopsis

  • Monitoring the spread of infectious diseases is crucial for timely public health interventions, but traditional incidence-based methods for estimating the effective reproduction number (Rt) have biases and limitations, especially early in an epidemic.
  • Recent research highlights the importance of viral loads measured by cycle thresholds (Ct) in understanding epidemic trajectories, leading to the development of a new approach called Cycle Threshold-based Transformer (Ct-Transformer).
  • The Ct-Transformer shows improved accuracy over traditional methods in estimating Rt and is adaptable to varying detection resources, achieving strong performance through both supervised and self-supervised learning on real-world and synthetic datasets.

Article Abstract

Monitoring the spread of infectious disease is essential to design and adjust the interventions timely for the prevention of the epidemic outbreak and safeguarding the public health. The governments have generally adopted the incidence-based statistical method to estimate the time-varying effective reproduction number Rt and evaluate the transmission ability of epidemics. However, this method exhibits biases arising from the reported incidence data and assumes the generation interval distribution which is not available at the early stage of epidemic. Recent studies showed that the viral loads characterized by cycle threshold (Ct) of the infected populations evolving throughout the course of epidemic and providing a possibility to infer the epidemic trajectory. In this work, we propose the Cycle Threshold-based Transformer (Ct-Transformer) to estimate Rt. We find the supervised learning of Ct-Transformer outperforms the traditional incidence-based statistic and Ct-based Rt estimating methods, and more importantly Ct-Transformer is robust to the detection resources. Further, we apply the proposed model to self-supervised pre-training tasks and obtain excellent fine-tuned performance, which attains comparable performance with the supervised Ct-Transformer, verified by both the synthetic and real-world datasets. We demonstrate that the Ct-based deep learning method can improve the real-time estimates of Rt, enabling more easily adapted to the track of the newly emerged epidemic.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11706484PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012694DOI Listing

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