Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Participants
- Non-Participant Contributors
- Part 1 Transmissible diseases with long development times and vaccination strategies
- Overview of data analysis: diseases with long development times
- HPV and cervical cancer
- An age-structured model for measles vaccination
- Invited Discussion
- Invited Discussion
- Piece-wise constant models to estimate age- and time-specific incidence of toxoplasmosis from age- and time-specific seroprevalence data
- New methodology for AIDS back calculation
- Imperfect HIV vaccines, the consequences for epidemic control and clinical trials
- Feasibility of prophylactic HIV-vaccine trials: some statistical issues
- The design of immunisation programmes against hepatitis B virus in developing countries
- The effect of different mixing patterns on vaccination programs
- Optimal vaccination patterns in age-structured populations I: the reproduction number
- Optimal vaccination patterns in age-structured populations II: optimal strategies
- Part 2 Dynamics of immunity (development of disease within individuals)
- Part 3 Population heterogeneity (mixing)
- Part 4 Consequences of treatment interventions
- Part 5 Prediction
New methodology for AIDS back calculation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Participants
- Non-Participant Contributors
- Part 1 Transmissible diseases with long development times and vaccination strategies
- Overview of data analysis: diseases with long development times
- HPV and cervical cancer
- An age-structured model for measles vaccination
- Invited Discussion
- Invited Discussion
- Piece-wise constant models to estimate age- and time-specific incidence of toxoplasmosis from age- and time-specific seroprevalence data
- New methodology for AIDS back calculation
- Imperfect HIV vaccines, the consequences for epidemic control and clinical trials
- Feasibility of prophylactic HIV-vaccine trials: some statistical issues
- The design of immunisation programmes against hepatitis B virus in developing countries
- The effect of different mixing patterns on vaccination programs
- Optimal vaccination patterns in age-structured populations I: the reproduction number
- Optimal vaccination patterns in age-structured populations II: optimal strategies
- Part 2 Dynamics of immunity (development of disease within individuals)
- Part 3 Population heterogeneity (mixing)
- Part 4 Consequences of treatment interventions
- Part 5 Prediction
Summary
Back-calculation methods have been widely used to reconstruct the past history of the HIV epidemic and to provide short-term predictions of AIDS incidence, on the basis of reported AIDS cases, knowledge of the incubation period distribution and assumptions on the shape of the HIV infection curve.
Within the back-calculation framework, a great variety of different model assumptions and modelling approaches have been employed at each stage of the process (infection, incubation and reporting). Considerable uncertainty exists about the appropriate form for each stage. For example only information on first half of the incubation distribution is available, and knowledge of the effect and extent of AIDS prophylaxis and treatment is still limited. Furthermore, the history of HIV incidence can only be inferred indirectly.
The complexity of the total model has prevented a formal treatment of uncertainty in model formulation and parameter estimation. For example, parameters of the incubation distribution are usually fixed. Further complexities are added through use of other sources of data, such as seroprevalence estimates (and their inherent imprecision). Informal sensitivity analyses and bootstrapping have provided partial answers to the effects of uncertainty on AIDS projections, but a formal treatment of uncertainty demands a new approach to estimation. In particular, a Bayesian framework is indicated, since informative prior distributions on some parameters would allow useful compromises between assuming complete ignorance about their values, and fixing them absolutely.
We describe the basics of AIDS back calculation, reviewing model assumptions and generalisations. We motivate our approach to model building, and propose estimation through Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC). We show some results for the epidemic in England and Wales.
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- Information
- Models for Infectious Human DiseasesTheir Structure and Relation to Data, pp. 72 - 73Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996