2000-2018年加利福尼亚州野火与球孢子菌病发病率之间的关系:合成对照分析。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2023-06-12 eCollection Date: 2023-08-01 DOI:10.1097/EE9.0000000000000254
Sophie Phillips, Isabel Jones, Gail Sondermyer-Cooksey, Alexander T Yu, Alexandra K Heaney, Bo Zhou, Abinash Bhattachan, Amanda K Weaver, Simon K Campo, Whitney Mgbara, Robert Wagner, John Taylor, Dennis Lettenmaier, Gregory S Okin, Seema Jain, Duc Vugia, Justin V Remais, Jennifer R Head
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近几十年来,美国西部发生野火的频率和严重程度都在增加,这促使人们提出了野火会导致球孢子菌病发病的假设,球孢子菌病是美国西部一种新出现的真菌疾病,自 2000 年以来发病率急剧上升。虽然在清理灌木丛的野地消防员中爆发了球孢子菌病,但野火是否与普通人群中球孢子菌病发病率的增加有关仍是未知数:我们确定了 2003 年至 2015 年期间发生在加利福尼亚高流行性圣华金河谷的 19 起野火。利用地理定位监测记录,我们采用合成控制方法估算了每场野火对火灾周围 20 公里半径六边形缓冲区内居民球孢子菌病发病率的影响:我们没有发现在野火发生后的 12 个月(病例百分比变化汇总估计值:2.8%;95% 置信区间 [CI] = -29.0,85.2)、13-24 个月(7.9%;95% CI = -27.3,113.9)或 25-36 个月(17.4%;95% CI = -25.1,157.1)内,因野火而出现过多病例。在单独研究时,我们发现在 19 场野火中的 3 场野火后发病率显著增加,所有这些野火的邻近人口相对较多、火灾前传播率较高、燃烧面积超过 5,000 英亩:讨论:我们发现,野火导致普通人群球孢子菌病发病率上升的证据有限。尽管如此,我们的研究结果还是引起了人们的关注,即在球孢子菌持续在当地传播的地区发生大火可能与发病率的增加有关,这突出表明有必要对野火前后土壤和空气中的球孢子菌属进行实地研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Association between wildfires and coccidioidomycosis incidence in California, 2000-2018: a synthetic control analysis.

Association between wildfires and coccidioidomycosis incidence in California, 2000-2018: a synthetic control analysis.

Association between wildfires and coccidioidomycosis incidence in California, 2000-2018: a synthetic control analysis.

Association between wildfires and coccidioidomycosis incidence in California, 2000-2018: a synthetic control analysis.

The frequency and severity of wildfires in the Western United States have increased over recent decades, motivating hypotheses that wildfires contribute to the incidence of coccidioidomycosis, an emerging fungal disease in the Western United States with sharp increases in incidence observed since 2000. While coccidioidomycosis outbreaks have occurred among wildland firefighters clearing brush, it remains unknown whether fires are associated with an increased incidence among the general population.

Methods: We identified 19 wildfires occurring within California's highly endemic San Joaquin Valley between 2003 and 2015. Using geolocated surveillance records, we applied a synthetic control approach to estimate the effect of each wildfire on the incidence of coccidioidomycosis among residents that lived within a hexagonal buffer of 20 km radii surrounding the fire.

Results: We did not detect excess cases due to wildfires in the 12 months (pooled estimated percent change in cases: 2.8%; 95% confidence interval [CI] = -29.0, 85.2), 13-24 months (7.9%; 95% CI = -27.3, 113.9), or 25-36 months (17.4%; 95% CI = -25.1, 157.1) following a wildfire. When examined individually, we detected significant increases in incidence following three of the 19 wildfires, all of which had relatively large adjacent populations, high transmission before the fire, and a burn area exceeding 5,000 acres.

Discussion: We find limited evidence that wildfires drive increases in coccidioidomycosis incidence among the general population. Nevertheless, our results raise concerns that large fires in regions with ongoing local transmission of Coccidioides may be associated with increases in incidence, underscoring the need for field studies examining Coccidioides spp. in soils and air pre- and post-wildfires.

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CiteScore
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