Treating symptomatic infections and the co-evolution of virulence and drug resistance.


Journal

Peer community journal
ISSN: 2804-3871
Titre abrégé: Peer Community J
Pays: France
ID NLM: 9918367773706676

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2021
Historique:
medline: 1 1 2021
pubmed: 1 1 2021
entrez: 6 5 2024
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Antimicrobial therapeutic treatments are by definition applied after the onset of symptoms, which tend to correlate with infection severity. Using mathematical epidemiology models, I explore how this link affects the coevolutionary dynamics between the virulence of an infection, measured via host mortality rate, and its susceptibility to chemotherapy. I show that unless resistance pre-exists in the population, drug-resistant infections are initially more virulent than drug-sensitive ones. As the epidemic unfolds, virulence is more counter-selected in drug-sensitive than in drug-resistant infections. This difference decreases over time and, eventually, the exact shape of genetic trade-offs govern long-term evolutionary dynamics. Using adaptive dynamics, I show that two types of evolutionary stable strategies (ESS) may be reached in the context of this simple model and that, depending on the parameter values, an ESS may only be locally stable. In general, the more the treatment rate increases with virulence, the lower the ESS value. Overall, both on the short-term and long-term, having treatment rate depend on infection virulence tend to favour less virulent strains in drug-sensitive infections. These results highlight the importance of the feedbacks between epidemiology, public health policies and parasite evolution, and have implications for the monitoring of virulence evolution.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38707518
doi: 10.24072/pcjournal.38
pmc: PMC7615929
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

e47

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Conflict of interest disclosure The author of this article declares that he has no financial conflict of interest with the content of this article. He is a recommender for PCI in Evolutionary Biology.

Auteurs

Samuel Alizon (S)

Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Biology (CIRB), College de France, CNRS, INSERM, Université PSL, Paris, France.
MIVEGEC, CNRS, IRD, Université de Montpellier, France.

Classifications MeSH