8 research outputs found
A Physiologically-Based Pharmacokinetic Model for the Antibiotic Ertapenem
Ertapenem is an antibiotic commonly used to treat a broad spectrum of infections, which is part of a broader class of antibiotics called carbapenem. Unlike other carbapenems, ertapenem has a longer half-life and thus only has to be administered once a day. A physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model was developed to investigate the uptake, distribution, and elimination of ertapenem following a single one gram dose. PBPK modeling incorporates known physiological parameters such as body weight, organ volumes, and blood ow rates in particular tissues. Furthermore, ertapenem is highly bound in human blood plasma; therefore, nonlinear binding is incorporated in the model since only the free portion of the drug can saturate tissues and, hence, is the only portion of the drug considered to be medicinally effective. Parameters in the model were estimated using a least squares inverse problem formulation with published data for blood concentrations of ertapenem for normal height, normal weight males. Finally, an uncertainty analysis of the parameter estimation and model predictions is presented
When does humoral memory enhance infection?
Antibodies and humoral memory are key components of the adaptive immune
system. We consider and computationally model mechanisms by which humoral
memory present at baseline might instead increase infection load; we refer to
this effect as EI-HM (enhancement of infection by humoral memory). We first
consider antibody dependent enhancement (ADE) in which antibody enhances the
growth of the pathogen, typically a virus, and typically at intermediate
"Goldilocks" levels of antibody. Our ADE model reproduces ADE in vitro and
enhancement of infection in vivo from passive antibody transfer. But notably
the simplest implementation of our ADE model never results in EI-HM. Adding
complexity, by making the cross-reactive antibody much less neutralizing than
the de novo generated antibody or by including a sufficiently strong
non-antibody immune response, allows for ADE-mediated EI-HM. We next consider
the possibility that cross-reactive memory causes EI-HM by crowding out a
possibly superior de novo immune response. We show that, even without ADE,
EI-HM can occur when the cross-reactive response is both less potent and
"directly" (i.e. independently of infection load) suppressive with regard to
the de novo response. In this case adding a non-antibody immune response to our
computational model greatly reduces or completely eliminates EI-HM, which
suggests that "crowding out" is unlikely to cause substantial EI-HM. Hence, our
results provide examples in which simple models give qualitatively opposite
results compared to models with plausible complexity. Our results may be
helpful in interpreting and reconciling disparate experimental findings,
especially from dengue, and for vaccination
Competing Heterogeneities in Vaccine Effectiveness Estimation
Understanding waning of vaccine-induced protection is important for both
immunology and public health. Population heterogeneities in underlying
(pre-vaccination) susceptibility and vaccine response can cause measured
vaccine effectiveness (mVE) to change over time even in the absence of pathogen
evolution and any actual waning of immune responses. We use a multi-scale
agent-based models parameterized using epidemiological and immunological data,
to investigate the effect of these heterogeneities on mVE as measured by the
hazard ratio. Based on our previous work, we consider waning of antibodies
according to a power law and link it to protection in two ways: 1) motivated by
correlates of risk data and 2) using a within-host model of stochastic viral
extinction. The effect of the heterogeneities is given by concise and
understandable formulas, one of which is essentially a generalization of
Fisher's fundamental theorem of natural selection to include higher
derivatives. Heterogeneity in underlying susceptibility accelerates apparent
waning, whereas heterogeneity in vaccine response slows down apparent waning.
Our models suggest that heterogeneity in underlying susceptibility is likely to
dominate. However, heterogeneity in vaccine response offsets 100%
(median of 29%) of this effect in our simulations. Our methodology and results
may be helpful in understanding competing heterogeneities and waning of
immunity and vaccine-induced protection. Our study suggests heterogeneity is
more likely to 'bias' mVE downwards towards faster waning of immunity but a
subtle bias in the opposite direction is also plausible
Estimating Waning of Vaccine Effectiveness: a Simulation Study
Developing accurate and reliable methods to estimate vaccine protection is a
key goal in immunology and public health. While several statistical methods
have been proposed, their potential inaccuracy in capturing fast intra-seasonal
waning of vaccine-induced protection needs to be rigorously investigated. To
compare statistical methods for vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimation, we
generated simulated data using a multiscale agent-based model of an epidemic
with an acute viral infection and differing extents of VE waning. We extended
the previously proposed framework for VE measures based on the observational
data richness to assess changes of vaccine-induced protection with time. While
VE measures based on hard-to-collect information (e.g. exact timing of
exposures) were accurate, usually VE studies rely on time-to-infection data and
the Cox proportional hazard model. We found that its extension utilizing scaled
Schoenfeld residuals, previously proposed for capturing VE waning, was
unreliable in capturing both the degree of waning and its functional form and
identified the mathematical factors contributing to this unreliability. We
showed that partitioning time and including a time-vaccine interaction term in
the Cox model significantly improved estimation of VE waning, even in the case
of dramatic, rapid waning. We also proposed how to optimize the partitioning
scheme. Using simulated data, we compared different measures of VE for
capturing the intra-seasonal waning of vaccine-induced protection. We propose
an extension of the Cox model based on including a time-vaccine interaction
term with further optimization of partitioning time. These findings may guide
future analysis of VE waning in observational data.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to Clinical Infectious Diseas