Risk mapping novel respiratory pathogens with large-scale dynamic contact networks

Publication date

2026-04-17

Authors

Romeijnders, MatthijsORCID 0009-0000-3605-3807
van Boven, Michiel
Panja, D.ORCID 0000-0003-2141-9735ISNI 0000000401966587

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Background Human-to-human transmission of pathogens fundamentally depends on interactions among infectious and susceptible individuals, yet traditional population-scale models often overlook the stochastic, behaviour-driven, and highly heterogeneous nature of these interactions. Methods Here, we develop a large-scale actor-based model capturing early epidemic dynamics of a novel respiratory pathogen on dynamic contact networks. We build these networks upon explicitly integrating detailed demographic and residential registry data from the Netherlands. The model simulates the Dutch population characterised by age, residency and mobility patterns, with actors interacting stochastically across households, workplaces and schools. Results We show how the geographic and demographic profiles of initial cases impact transmission trajectories, with densely populated municipalities in the country’s western core acting as key hubs driving epidemic spread. The framework enables rigorous assessment of intervention strategies incorporating behavioural adaptations. As case studies, we quantify the effects of symptomatic self-isolation and travel restrictions to and from major urban centres, highlighting their potential to modulate epidemic outcomes. Conclusions Our findings underscore the necessity of integrating fine-scale human-to-human contact realism and population scale in epidemic forecasting and control.

Keywords

Internal Medicine, Epidemiology, Medicine (miscellaneous), Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Assessment and Diagnosis

Citation

Romeijnders, M, van Boven, M & Panja, D 2026, 'Risk mapping novel respiratory pathogens with large-scale dynamic contact networks', Communications Medicine, vol. 6, no. 1, 229. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-026-01446-4