Measles-induced immune amnesia and its effects in concurrent epidemics
Guillermo B. Morales, Miguel A. Mu\~noz

TL;DR
This paper models the impact of measles-induced immune amnesia on the spread of concurrent diseases, revealing new epidemic phases and implications for vaccination strategies in complex networks.
Contribution
It introduces the first model incorporating immune amnesia into epidemic spreading, analyzing its effects on herd immunity and epidemic phases in various network structures.
Findings
Immune amnesia significantly alters herd immunity thresholds.
Novel propagating and endemic phases emerge due to immune amnesia.
Transitions to epidemic phases can be abrupt and explosive.
Abstract
It has been recently discovered that the measles virus can wipe out the adaptive immune system, destroying B lymphocytes and reducing the diversity of non-specific B cells of the infected host. In particular, this implies that previously acquired immunization from vaccination or direct exposition to other pathogens could be erased in a phenomenon named "immune amnesia", whose effects can become particularly worrisome given the actual rise of anti-vaccination movements. Here we present the first attempt to incorporate immune amnesia into standard models of epidemic spreading. In particular, we analyze diverse variants of a model that describes the spreading of two concurrent pathogens causing measles and another generic disease: the SIR-IA model. Analytical and computational studies confirm that immune amnesia can indeed have important consequences for epidemic spreading, significantly…
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