4.5 Article

Characteristics of Mild Dengue Virus Infection in Thai Children

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TROPICAL MEDICINE AND HYGIENE
Volume 89, Issue 6, Pages 1081-1087

Publisher

AMER SOC TROP MED & HYGIENE
DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.13-0424

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P01 AI34533, R01 GM083224]
  2. U.S. Military Infectious Diseases Research Program [S0016-04-AF]
  3. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Global Health Program [OPP52250]
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Fellowship

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A four-year longitudinal cohort and geographic cluster study in rural Thailand was conducted to characterize the clinical spectrum of dengue virus (DENY) infection. Symptomatic DENV infections in the cohort were detected by active school absence-based surveillance that triggered cluster investigations around ill cohort children. Data from 189 cohort children with symptomatic DENV infection and 126 contact children in the clusters with DENY infection were analyzed. Of injected contacts, only 19% were asymptomatic; 81% were symptomatic, but only 65.9% reported fever. Symptom-based case definitions were unreliable for diagnosis. Symptomatic infections in contacts were milder with lower DENV RNA levels than the cohort. Infections in contacts with fever history were more likely to have detectable DENV RNA than infections without fever history. Mild infections identified by cluster investigations account for a major proportion of all DENY infections. These findings are relevant for disease burden assessments, transmission modeling, and determination of vaccine impact.

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