Semi-Parametric Spatial Joint Modeling of HIV and HSV-2 among Women in Kenya: e0135212

Several diseases have common risk factors. The joint modeling of disease outcomes within a spatial statistical context may provide more insight on the interaction of diseases both at individual and at regional level. Spatial joint modeling allows for studying of the relationship between diseases and...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:PloS one Vol. 10; no. 8
Main Authors: Okango, Elphas, Mwambi, Henry, Ngesa, Oscar, Achia, Thomas
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 01-08-2015
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Abstract Several diseases have common risk factors. The joint modeling of disease outcomes within a spatial statistical context may provide more insight on the interaction of diseases both at individual and at regional level. Spatial joint modeling allows for studying of the relationship between diseases and also between regions under study. One major approach for joint spatial modeling is the multivariate conditional autoregressive approach. In this approach, it is assumed that all the covariates in the study have linear effects on the multiple response variables. In this study, we relax this linearity assumption and allow some covariates to have nonlinear effects using the penalized regression splines. This model was used to jointly model the spatial variation of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and herpes simplex virus-type 2 (HSV-2) among women in Kenya. The model was applied to HIV and HSV-2 prevalence data among women aged 15-49 years in Kenya, derived from the 2007 Kenya AIDS indicator survey. A full Bayesian approach was used and the models were implemented in WinBUGS software. Both diseases showed significant spatial variation with highest disease burdens occurring around the Lake Victoria region. There was a nonlinear association between age of an individual and HIV and HSV-2 infection. The peak age for HIV was around 30 years while that of HSV-2 was about 40 years. A positive significant spatial correlation between HIV and HSV-2 was observed with a correlation of 0.6831(95% CI: 0.3859, 0.871).
AbstractList Several diseases have common risk factors. The joint modeling of disease outcomes within a spatial statistical context may provide more insight on the interaction of diseases both at individual and at regional level. Spatial joint modeling allows for studying of the relationship between diseases and also between regions under study. One major approach for joint spatial modeling is the multivariate conditional autoregressive approach. In this approach, it is assumed that all the covariates in the study have linear effects on the multiple response variables. In this study, we relax this linearity assumption and allow some covariates to have nonlinear effects using the penalized regression splines. This model was used to jointly model the spatial variation of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and herpes simplex virus-type 2 (HSV-2) among women in Kenya. The model was applied to HIV and HSV-2 prevalence data among women aged 15-49 years in Kenya, derived from the 2007 Kenya AIDS indicator survey. A full Bayesian approach was used and the models were implemented in WinBUGS software. Both diseases showed significant spatial variation with highest disease burdens occurring around the Lake Victoria region. There was a nonlinear association between age of an individual and HIV and HSV-2 infection. The peak age for HIV was around 30 years while that of HSV-2 was about 40 years. A positive significant spatial correlation between HIV and HSV-2 was observed with a correlation of 0.6831(95% CI: 0.3859, 0.871).
Author Okango, Elphas
Ngesa, Oscar
Achia, Thomas
Mwambi, Henry
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Elphas
  surname: Okango
  fullname: Okango, Elphas
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Henry
  surname: Mwambi
  fullname: Mwambi, Henry
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Oscar
  surname: Ngesa
  fullname: Ngesa, Oscar
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Thomas
  surname: Achia
  fullname: Achia, Thomas
BookMark eNqVjU1Lw0AQQJdSwVb9Bx7m6CVxP8i2ei1KqghCJB7L0E5ly-5Mmk0O_vv20D_Q04PHgzdXUxYmpR6NLo1bmOeDjD1jLLuzLrVxlTV2ombmxdnCW-1u1Tzng9aVW3o_U21DKRTf2GOioQ9baDocAkb4kMADfMmOYuA_kD3U6xaQd1A3bWEBk5z1ryRiCAyfxP_4CnQ53qubPcZMDxfeqaf3t59VXXS9HEfKwyaFvKUYkUnGvDELb5233lTuivQEjWtK3Q
ContentType Journal Article
DBID 7U9
H94
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0135212
DatabaseName Virology and AIDS Abstracts
AIDS and Cancer Research Abstracts
DatabaseTitle Virology and AIDS Abstracts
AIDS and Cancer Research Abstracts
DatabaseTitleList Virology and AIDS Abstracts
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline Sciences (General)
EISSN 1932-6203
GroupedDBID ---
123
29O
2WC
3V.
53G
5VS
7RV
7U9
7X2
7X7
7XC
88E
8AO
8C1
8CJ
8FE
8FG
8FH
8FI
8FJ
A8Z
AAFWJ
ABDBF
ABIVO
ABJCF
ABUWG
ACGFO
ACIHN
ACIWK
ACPRK
ADBBV
ADRAZ
AEAQA
AENEX
AFKRA
AFRAH
AHMBA
ALIPV
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
AOIJS
APEBS
ARAPS
ATCPS
BAWUL
BBNVY
BBORY
BCNDV
BENPR
BGLVJ
BHPHI
BKEYQ
BPHCQ
BVXVI
BWKFM
CCPQU
CS3
D1I
D1J
D1K
DIK
DU5
E3Z
EAP
EAS
EBD
EMOBN
ESTFP
ESX
EX3
F5P
FPL
FYUFA
GROUPED_DOAJ
GX1
H94
HCIFZ
HH5
HMCUK
HYE
IAO
IEA
IHR
IHW
INH
INR
IOV
IPY
ISE
ISR
ITC
K6-
KB.
KQ8
L6V
LK5
LK8
M0K
M1P
M48
M7P
M7R
M7S
M~E
NAPCQ
O5R
O5S
OK1
P2P
P62
PATMY
PDBOC
PIMPY
PQQKQ
PROAC
PSQYO
PTHSS
PV9
PYCSY
RNS
RPM
RZL
SV3
TR2
UKHRP
WOQ
WOW
~02
~KM
ID FETCH-proquest_miscellaneous_17623626153
IngestDate Fri Oct 25 12:24:13 EDT 2024
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 8
Language English
LinkModel OpenURL
MergedId FETCHMERGED-proquest_miscellaneous_17623626153
Notes ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
content type line 23
ObjectType-Feature-2
PQID 1762362615
PQPubID 23462
ParticipantIDs proquest_miscellaneous_1762362615
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 20150801
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2015-08-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 08
  year: 2015
  text: 20150801
  day: 01
PublicationDecade 2010
PublicationTitle PloS one
PublicationYear 2015
SSID ssj0053866
Score 3.9414375
Snippet Several diseases have common risk factors. The joint modeling of disease outcomes within a spatial statistical context may provide more insight on the...
SourceID proquest
SourceType Aggregation Database
SubjectTerms Herpes simplex virus 2
Human immunodeficiency virus
Human immunodeficiency virus 2
Title Semi-Parametric Spatial Joint Modeling of HIV and HSV-2 among Women in Kenya: e0135212
URI https://search.proquest.com/docview/1762362615
Volume 10
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://sdu.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwtZ3LT8IwGMAbxYsXIz7iOzXxgCFD9gZvREd2QCDZJNyW7oWLsBEHMf73fu268ZBEPHhZlmZp1v6279Wv_RC6811P8tRQEny3CQ5KQIjg1uFbBlUA7pAKRodLV3RNS-8OG8-GYuQl4cHrL9r-lTS0AWu6c_YPtItOoQHugTlcgTpct-JuBZNI6BOac0UP36_SmsMRC_ZF8YyVPhvzRGcTPD8aNjetgSDxqkOsoCWNgYAA_srK9sBE0p23y1Zsf5xY1WSxIN97J_EoybLEpm-kMNNfPsnEzcpi070QReB5FKTMZu2lHimSg1s063otZ4mHI0S1SIYDbZKJULAIBU2qyysytr70LTU2im5ZZ6I7m8naFAZRWx7gyknZ3Z7Tfu10HNsY2rtoTwIhU7jTmRYGOa5pfKsk9Pywqd8f6pfZFPYhOuDOAG5lFMtoJ4iPUJmL2xRX-Jng98dosIYVc6yYYcU5VpyEGLBiwIoZVsywYoYVRzFmWB9xDvUEVdqG_WQK-Rs68NvTtRwSB8k8dURQYvQkIVBYp6gUw6jOEG6IoecTTZcV4iokCJq6GIIxohIllD1Vd8_R7a_dXWzxzCXaX6C_QqXZxzy4RrupP79hEL4BTR4_bQ
link.rule.ids 315,782,786,866,27933,27934
linkProvider Directory of Open Access Journals
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Semi-Parametric+Spatial+Joint+Modeling+of+HIV+and+HSV-2+among+Women+in+Kenya%3A+e0135212&rft.jtitle=PloS+one&rft.au=Okango%2C+Elphas&rft.au=Mwambi%2C+Henry&rft.au=Ngesa%2C+Oscar&rft.au=Achia%2C+Thomas&rft.date=2015-08-01&rft.eissn=1932-6203&rft.volume=10&rft.issue=8&rft_id=info:doi/10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0135212&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT