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A climatic suitability indicator to support Leishmania infantum surveillance in Europe: a modelling study

Bruno Moreira de Carvalho, Carla Maia, Orin Courtenay, Alba Llabrés‐Brustenga, Martín Lotto Batista, Giovenale Moirano, Kim Robin van Daalen, Jan C. Semenza, Rachel Lowe

2024The Lancet Regional Health - Europe35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background Leishmaniases are neglected diseases transmitted by sand flies. They disproportionately affect vulnerable groups globally. Understanding the relationship between climate and disease transmission allows the development of relevant decision-support tools for public health policy and surveillance. The aim of this modelling study was to develop an indicator that tracks climatic suitability for Leishmania infantum transmission in Europe at the subnational level. Methods Historical records of sand fly vectors, human leishmaniasis, bioclimatic indicators, and environmental variables were integrated in a machine learning framework (XGBoost) to predict suitability in two past periods (2001–2010 and 2011–2020). We further assessed if predictions were associated with human and animal disease data from selected countries (France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Spain). Findings An increase in the number of climatically suitable regions for leishmaniasis was detected, especially in southern and eastern countries, coupled with a northward expansion towards central Europe. The final model had excellent predictive ability (AUC = 0.970 [0.947–0.993]), and the suitability predictions were positively associated with human leishmaniasis incidence and canine seroprevalence for Leishmania . Interpretation This study demonstrates how key epidemiological data can be combined with open-source climatic and environmental information to develop an indicator that effectively tracks spatiotemporal changes in climatic suitability and disease risk. The positive association between the model predictions and human disease incidence demonstrates that this indicator could help target leishmaniasis surveillance to transmission hotspots. Funding European Union Horizon Europe Research and Innovation Programme (European Climate-Health Cluster), United Kingdom Research and Innovation.

Topics & Concepts

Leishmania infantumLeishmaniaLeishmaniasisEnvironmental scienceBiologyComputer scienceVisceral leishmaniasisImmunologyWorld Wide WebParasite hostingResearch on Leishmaniasis StudiesParasites and Host InteractionsInsects and Parasite Interactions
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