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The Critical Role of Early Dengue Surveillance and Limitations of Clinical Reporting – Implications for Non-Endemic Countries

The increasing dengue burden and epidemic severity worldwide have highlighted the need to improve surveillance. In non-endemic areas such as Taiwan, where outbreaks start mostly with imported cases from Southeast Asia, a closer examination of surveillance dynamics to detect cases early is necessary....

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Autores principales: Kao, Jui-Hung, Chen, Chaur-Dong, Tiger Li, Zheng-Rong, Chan, Ta-Chien, Tung, Tsung-Hwa, Chu, Yin-Hsia, Cheng, Hau-Yuan, Liu, Jien-Wei, Shih, Fuh-Yuan, Shu, Pei-Yun, Lin, Chien-Chou, Tsai, Wu-Hsiung, Ku, Chia-Chi, Ho, Chi-Kung, King, Chwan-Chuen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4976904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27501302
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160230
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author Kao, Jui-Hung
Chen, Chaur-Dong
Tiger Li, Zheng-Rong
Chan, Ta-Chien
Tung, Tsung-Hwa
Chu, Yin-Hsia
Cheng, Hau-Yuan
Liu, Jien-Wei
Shih, Fuh-Yuan
Shu, Pei-Yun
Lin, Chien-Chou
Tsai, Wu-Hsiung
Ku, Chia-Chi
Ho, Chi-Kung
King, Chwan-Chuen
author_facet Kao, Jui-Hung
Chen, Chaur-Dong
Tiger Li, Zheng-Rong
Chan, Ta-Chien
Tung, Tsung-Hwa
Chu, Yin-Hsia
Cheng, Hau-Yuan
Liu, Jien-Wei
Shih, Fuh-Yuan
Shu, Pei-Yun
Lin, Chien-Chou
Tsai, Wu-Hsiung
Ku, Chia-Chi
Ho, Chi-Kung
King, Chwan-Chuen
author_sort Kao, Jui-Hung
collection PubMed
description The increasing dengue burden and epidemic severity worldwide have highlighted the need to improve surveillance. In non-endemic areas such as Taiwan, where outbreaks start mostly with imported cases from Southeast Asia, a closer examination of surveillance dynamics to detect cases early is necessary. To evaluate problems with dengue surveillance and investigate the involvement of different factors at various epidemic stages, we investigated 632 laboratory-confirmed indigenous dengue cases in Kaohsiung City, Taiwan during 2009–2010. The estimated sensitivity of clinical surveillance was 82.4% (521/632). Initially, the modified serological surveillance (targeting only the contacts of laboratory-confirmed dengue cases) identified clinically unrecognized afebrile cases in younger patients who visited private clinics and accounted for 30.4% (35/115) of the early-stage cases. Multivariate regression indicated that hospital/medical center visits [Adjusted Odds Ratio (aOR): 11.6, 95% confidence interval (CI): 6.3–21.4], middle epidemic stage [aOR: 2.4 (1.2–4.7)], fever [aOR: 2.3 (2.3–12.9)], and musculo-articular pain [aOR: 1.9 (1.05–3.3)] were significantly associated with clinical reporting. However, cases with pruritus/rash [aOR: 0.47 (0.26–0.83)] and diarrhea [aOR: 0.47 (0.26–0.85)] were underreported. In conclusion, multiple factors contributed to dengue surveillance problems. To prevent a large-scale epidemic and minimize severe dengue cases, there is a need for integrated surveillance incorporating entomological, clinical, serological, and virological surveillance systems to detect early cases, followed by immediate prevention and control measures and continuous evaluation to ensure effectiveness. This effort will be particularly important for an arbovirus, such as Zika virus, with a high asymptomatic infection ratio. For dengue- non-endemic countries, we recommend serological surveillance be implemented in areas with high Aedes mosquito indices or many breeding sites. Syndromic surveillance, spatial analysis and monitoring changes in epidemiological characteristics using a geographical information system, as well as epidemic prediction models involving epidemiological, meteorological and environmental variables will be helpful for early risk communication to increase awareness.
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spelling pubmed-49769042016-08-25 The Critical Role of Early Dengue Surveillance and Limitations of Clinical Reporting – Implications for Non-Endemic Countries Kao, Jui-Hung Chen, Chaur-Dong Tiger Li, Zheng-Rong Chan, Ta-Chien Tung, Tsung-Hwa Chu, Yin-Hsia Cheng, Hau-Yuan Liu, Jien-Wei Shih, Fuh-Yuan Shu, Pei-Yun Lin, Chien-Chou Tsai, Wu-Hsiung Ku, Chia-Chi Ho, Chi-Kung King, Chwan-Chuen PLoS One Research Article The increasing dengue burden and epidemic severity worldwide have highlighted the need to improve surveillance. In non-endemic areas such as Taiwan, where outbreaks start mostly with imported cases from Southeast Asia, a closer examination of surveillance dynamics to detect cases early is necessary. To evaluate problems with dengue surveillance and investigate the involvement of different factors at various epidemic stages, we investigated 632 laboratory-confirmed indigenous dengue cases in Kaohsiung City, Taiwan during 2009–2010. The estimated sensitivity of clinical surveillance was 82.4% (521/632). Initially, the modified serological surveillance (targeting only the contacts of laboratory-confirmed dengue cases) identified clinically unrecognized afebrile cases in younger patients who visited private clinics and accounted for 30.4% (35/115) of the early-stage cases. Multivariate regression indicated that hospital/medical center visits [Adjusted Odds Ratio (aOR): 11.6, 95% confidence interval (CI): 6.3–21.4], middle epidemic stage [aOR: 2.4 (1.2–4.7)], fever [aOR: 2.3 (2.3–12.9)], and musculo-articular pain [aOR: 1.9 (1.05–3.3)] were significantly associated with clinical reporting. However, cases with pruritus/rash [aOR: 0.47 (0.26–0.83)] and diarrhea [aOR: 0.47 (0.26–0.85)] were underreported. In conclusion, multiple factors contributed to dengue surveillance problems. To prevent a large-scale epidemic and minimize severe dengue cases, there is a need for integrated surveillance incorporating entomological, clinical, serological, and virological surveillance systems to detect early cases, followed by immediate prevention and control measures and continuous evaluation to ensure effectiveness. This effort will be particularly important for an arbovirus, such as Zika virus, with a high asymptomatic infection ratio. For dengue- non-endemic countries, we recommend serological surveillance be implemented in areas with high Aedes mosquito indices or many breeding sites. Syndromic surveillance, spatial analysis and monitoring changes in epidemiological characteristics using a geographical information system, as well as epidemic prediction models involving epidemiological, meteorological and environmental variables will be helpful for early risk communication to increase awareness. Public Library of Science 2016-08-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4976904/ /pubmed/27501302 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160230 Text en © 2016 Kao et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kao, Jui-Hung
Chen, Chaur-Dong
Tiger Li, Zheng-Rong
Chan, Ta-Chien
Tung, Tsung-Hwa
Chu, Yin-Hsia
Cheng, Hau-Yuan
Liu, Jien-Wei
Shih, Fuh-Yuan
Shu, Pei-Yun
Lin, Chien-Chou
Tsai, Wu-Hsiung
Ku, Chia-Chi
Ho, Chi-Kung
King, Chwan-Chuen
The Critical Role of Early Dengue Surveillance and Limitations of Clinical Reporting – Implications for Non-Endemic Countries
title The Critical Role of Early Dengue Surveillance and Limitations of Clinical Reporting – Implications for Non-Endemic Countries
title_full The Critical Role of Early Dengue Surveillance and Limitations of Clinical Reporting – Implications for Non-Endemic Countries
title_fullStr The Critical Role of Early Dengue Surveillance and Limitations of Clinical Reporting – Implications for Non-Endemic Countries
title_full_unstemmed The Critical Role of Early Dengue Surveillance and Limitations of Clinical Reporting – Implications for Non-Endemic Countries
title_short The Critical Role of Early Dengue Surveillance and Limitations of Clinical Reporting – Implications for Non-Endemic Countries
title_sort critical role of early dengue surveillance and limitations of clinical reporting – implications for non-endemic countries
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4976904/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27501302
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160230
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