Abstract

BackgroundDengue viruses (DENV) have emerged and reemerged in Brazil in the past 30 years causing explosive epidemics. The disease may range from clinically asymptomatic infections to severe and fatal outcomes. We aimed to describe the epidemiological, clinical and laboratorial aspects of the dengue fatal cases received by a Regional Reference Laboratory, Brazil in 30 years.MethodsA total of 1047 suspected fatal dengue cases were received from 1986 to 2015 and analyzed in the Laboratory of Flavivirus, FIOCRUZ. Suspected cases were submitted to viral detection, serological and molecular methods for cases confirmation. Influence of gender, age, serotype and type of infection (primary/secondary) on death outcome, as well the interactions between serotype and age or infection and age and type of infection were also studied.ResultsA total of 359 cases (34.2%) were confirmed and DENV-1 (11.1%), DENV-2 (43.9%), DENV-3 (32.8%) and DENV-4 (13.7%) were detected. Overall, fatal cases occurred more often in primary infections (59.3%, p = 0.001). However, in 2008, fatal cases were mainly associated to secondary infections (p = 0.003). In 2008 and 2011, deaths were more frequent on children and those infected by DENV-2 presented a higher risk for fatal outcome. Moreover, children with secondary infections had a 4-fold higher risk for death.ConclusionsDengue is a multifactorial disease and, factors such as viral strain/serotype, occurrence of secondary infections and co-morbidities may lead to a severe outcome. However, the high dengue incidence and transmission during epidemics, such as those observed in Brazil may overwhelm and collapse the public health services, potentially impacting on increased disease severity and mortality.

Highlights

  • Dengue viruses (DENV) have emerged and reemerged in Brazil in the past 30 years causing explosive epidemics

  • All combinations of laboratorial diagnostic methods performed for the analysis of the dengue fatal cases are show on Fig. 1

  • The contribution of each method on the fatal cases confirmed were, as follows: DENV was isolated in 15.2% (46/302) of the confirmed cases after inoculation into C6/36 cells, and nested reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) contributed in 46.5% (153/329) of the confirmed cases

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Summary

Introduction

Dengue viruses (DENV) have emerged and reemerged in Brazil in the past 30 years causing explosive epidemics. Dengue fever is caused by any of the four distinct serotypes (DENV-1 to 4), belonging to the Flavivirus family. It is the most important arboviral diseases affecting humans worldwide and its global prevalence has grown dramatically in recent decades. About 100 million people are infected and 500,000 people develop severe dengue leading to about 70,000 deaths annually [1]. It poses a significant public health and economic burden in tropical and subtropical endemic regions [2, 3]. A recent estimate reported that the number of apparent dengue cases more than doubled every decade between 1990 to 2013, from 8.3 million in 1990 to 58.4 million in 2013 and, with an average of 9000 dengue fatal cases occurring per year [5]

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