Associations Between Eight Earth Observation-Derived Climate Variables and Enteropathogen Infection: An Independent Participant Data Meta-Analysis of Surveillance Studies With Broad Spectrum Nucleic Acid Diagnostics
Author
Colston, Josh M.Zaitchik, Benjamin F.
Badr, Hamada S.
Burnett, Eleanor
Ali, Syed Asad
Rayamajhi, Ajit
Satter, Syed M.
Eibach, Daniel
Krumkamp, Ralf
May, Jürgen
Chilengi, Roma
Howard, Leigh M.
Sow, Samba O.
Jahangir Hossain, M.
Saha, Debasish
Imran Nisar, M.
Zaidi, Anita K.M.
Kanungo, Suman
Mandomando, Inácio
Faruque, Abu S.G.
Kotloff, Karen L.
Levine, Myron M.
Breiman, Robert F.
Omore, Richard
Page, Nicola
Platts-Mills, James A.
Ashorn, Ulla
Fan, Yue Mei
Shrestha, Prakash Sunder
Ahmed, Tahmeed
Mduma, Estomih
Yori, Pablo Penatero
Bhutta, Zulfiqar
Bessong, Pascal
Olortegui, Maribel P.
Lima, Aldo A.M.
Kang, Gagandeep
Humphrey, Jean
Prendergast, Andrew J.
Ntozini, Robert
Okada, Kazuhisa
Wongboot, Warawan
Gaensbauer, James
Melgar, Mario T.
Pelkonen, Tuula
Freitas, Cesar Mavacala
Kosek, Margaret N.
Date
2022-01-01Journal
eoHealthPublisher
Wiley-BlackwellType
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Diarrheal disease, still a major cause of childhood illness, is caused by numerous, diverse infectious microorganisms, which are differentially sensitive to environmental conditions. Enteropathogen-specific impacts of climate remain underexplored. Results from 15 studies that diagnosed enteropathogens in 64,788 stool samples from 20,760 children in 19 countries were combined. Infection status for 10 common enteropathogens—adenovirus, astrovirus, norovirus, rotavirus, sapovirus, Campylobacter, ETEC, Shigella, Cryptosporidium and Giardia—was matched by date with hydrometeorological variables from a global Earth observation dataset—precipitation and runoff volume, humidity, soil moisture, solar radiation, air pressure, temperature, and wind speed. Models were fitted for each pathogen, accounting for lags, nonlinearity, confounders, and threshold effects. Different variables showed complex, non-linear associations with infection risk varying in magnitude and direction depending on pathogen species. Rotavirus infection decreased markedly following increasing 7-day average temperatures—a relative risk of 0.76 (95% confidence interval: 0.69–0.85) above 28°C—while ETEC risk increased by almost half, 1.43 (1.36–1.50), in the 20–35°C range. Risk for all pathogens was highest following soil moistures in the upper range. Humidity was associated with increases in bacterial infections and decreases in most viral infections. Several virus species' risk increased following lower-than-average rainfall, while rotavirus and ETEC increased with heavier runoff. Temperature, soil moisture, and humidity are particularly influential parameters across all enteropathogens, likely impacting pathogen survival outside the host. Precipitation and runoff have divergent associations with different enteric viruses. These effects may engender shifts in the relative burden of diarrhea-causing agents as the global climate changes. © 2021 The Authors.Sponsors
Centers for Disease Control and PreventionIdentifier to cite or link to this item
http://hdl.handle.net/10713/17904ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1029/2021GH000452