Clinical evaluation of dengue and identification of risk factors for severe disease: protocol for a multicentre study in 8 countries
View/ Open
Date
2016-02-18Publisher
© 2016 BMC Infectious DiseasesAuthor
Jaenisch, ThomasHoai Tam, Dong Thi
Thanh Kieu, Nguyen Tan
Ngoc, Tran Van
Tran Nam, Nguyen
Kinh, Nguyen Van
Yacoub, Sophie
Chanpheaktra, Ngoun
Kumar, Varun
Chai See, Lucy Lum
Sathar, Jameela
Sandoval, Ernesto Pleités
Marón Alfaro, Gabriela Maria
Laksono, Ida Safitri
Mahendradhata, Yodi
Sarker, Malabika
Ahmed, Firoz
Caprara, Andrea
Benevides, Bruno Souza
Marques, Ernesto T. A.
Magalhaes, Tereza
Brasil, Patricia
Netto, Marco
Tami, Adriana
Bethencourt, Sarah E.
Guzman, Maria
Simmons, Cameron
Quyen, Nguyen Thanh Ha
Merson, Laura
Dung, Nguyen Thi Phuong
Beck, Dorothea
Wirths, Marius
Wolbers, Marcel
Lam, Phung Khanh
Rosenberger, Kerstin
Wills, Bridget
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Jaenisch, T., Tam, D. T. H., Kieu, N. T. T., Van Ngoc, T., Nam, N. T., Van Kinh, N., … Wills, B. (2016). Clinical evaluation of dengue and identification of risk factors for severe disease: protocol for a multicentre study in 8 countries. BMC Infectious Diseases, 16(1), 120. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-016-1440-3Abstract
Background
The burden of dengue continues to increase globally, with an estimated 100 million clinically apparent infections occurring each year. Although most dengue infections are asymptomatic, patients can present with a wide spectrum of clinical symptoms ranging from mild febrile illness through to severe manifestations of bleeding, organ impairment, and hypovolaemic shock due to a systemic vascular leak syndrome. Clinical diagnosis of dengue and identification of which patients are likely to develop severe disease remain challenging. This study aims to improve diagnosis and clinical management through approaches designed a) to differentiate between dengue and other common febrile illness within 72 h of fever onset, and b) among patients with dengue to identify markers that are predictive of the likelihood of evolving to a more severe disease course.
Method/Design
This is a prospective multi-centre observational study aiming to enrol 7–8000 participants aged ≥ 5 years presenting with a febrile illness consistent with dengue to outpatient health facilities in 8 countries across Asia and Latin America. Patients presenting within 72 h of fever onset who do not exhibit signs of severe disease are eligible for the study. A broad range of clinical and laboratory parameters are assessed daily for up to 6 days during the acute illness, and also at a follow up visit 1 week later.
Discussion
Data from this large cohort of patients, enrolled early with undifferentiated fever, will be used to develop a practical diagnostic algorithm and a robust clinical case definition for dengue. Additionally, among patients with confirmed dengue we aim to identify simple clinical and laboratory parameters associated with progression to a more severe disease course. We will also investigate early virological and serological correlates of severe disease, and examine genetic associations in this large heterogeneous cohort. In addition the results will be used to assess the new World Health Organization classification scheme for dengue in practice, and to update the guidelines for “Integrated Management of Childhood Illness” used in dengue-endemic countries.
Description
This article was published in the BMC Infectious Diseases [© Jaenisch et al. 2016] and the definite version is available at : https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-016-1440-3 . The Journal's website is at: https://bmcinfectdis.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12879-016-1440-3Type
ArticleCollections
- Article [16]
- Journal Articles (2016) [10]
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
In support of urban adaptation: a participatory assessment process for secondary cities in Vietnam and Bangladesh
Mallick, Fuad H.; McEvoy, Darryn; Ahmed, Iftekhar; Trundle, Alexei; Sang, Le Thanh; Diem, Nguyen Ngoc; Suu, Lam Thi Thu; Quoc, Tran Ba; Rahman, Rezaur; Rahman, Mohammad Aminur; Mukherjee, Nandan; Nishat, Ainun (© 1996 Taylor & Francis Online, 2014-02-26)Vietnam and Bangladesh are countries already impacted by weather-related extreme events. Scientific modelling projections indicate that climate change, and changes to climate variability, will increase risks for both ... -
Accelerating 2d fault diagnosis of an induction motor using a graphics processing unit
Uddin, Jia; Van, Dinh Nguyen; Kim, Jong-Myon (© 2015 Science and Engineering Research Support Society, 2015)This paper presents a computationally efficient graphics processing unit (GPU) implementation of a reliable fault diagnosis method using two-dimensional (2D) representation of vibration signals. The fault diagnosis method ... -
Nutrition interventions integrated into an existing maternal, neonatal, and child health program reduce food insecurity among recently delivered and pregnant women in Bangladesh.
Frongillo, Edward A; Nguyen, Phuong H; Sanghvi, Tina; Mahmud, Zeba; Aktar, Bachera; Alayon, Silvia; Menon, Purnima (Oxford Academic, 2019-01-13)Background: Antenatal care may be a means to reduce food insecurity in pregnancy and postpartum periods. Objective: With the use of a cluster-randomized design, we tested whether participation in nutrition-focused ...