Abstract

Dengue is a national priority disease in Cambodia. The Cambodian National Dengue Surveillance System is based on passive surveillance of dengue-like inpatients reported by public hospitals and on a sentinel, pediatric hospital-based active surveillance system. This system works well to assess trends but the sensitivity of the early warning and time-lag to usefully inform hospitals can be improved. During The ECOnomic development, ECOsystem MOdifications, and emerging infectious diseases Risk Evaluation (ECOMORE) project’s knowledge translation platforms, Cambodian hospital staff requested an early warning tool to prepare for major outbreaks. Our objective was therefore to find adapted tools to improve the early warning system and preparedness. Dengue data was provided by the National Dengue Control Program (NDCP) and are routinely obtained through passive surveillance. The data were analyzed at the provincial level for eight Cambodian provinces during 2008–2015. The R surveillance package was used for the analysis. We evaluated the effectiveness of Bayesian algorithms to detect outbreaks using count data series, comparing the current count to an expected distribution obtained from observations of past years. The analyses bore on 78,759 patients with dengue-like syndromes. The algorithm maximizing sensitivity and specificity for the detection of major dengue outbreaks was selected in each province. The overall sensitivity and specificity were 73% and 97%, respectively, for the detection of significant outbreaks during 2008–2015. Depending on the province, sensitivity and specificity ranged from 50% to 100% and 75% to 100%, respectively. The final algorithm meets clinicians’ and decisionmakers’ needs, is cost-free and is easy to implement at the provincial level.

Highlights

  • Dengue fever is an infectious disease transmitted by the bite of mosquitoes (Aedes spp) and caused by a virus of the genus Flavivirus

  • The casefatality rate (CFR) for severe dengue ranges from 20% in some outbreaks to less than 1% [2]

  • All probable and laboratory-confirmed dengue cases are reported for the previous week, according to the case definition provided by Centre National de Malariologie (CNM)’s National Dengue Control Program (NDCP) [7]

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Summary

Introduction

Dengue fever is an infectious disease transmitted by the bite of mosquitoes (Aedes spp) and caused by a virus of the genus Flavivirus. 96 million symptomatic dengue infections occurred worldwide in 2010 [1]. Most infections are benign but severe forms requiring hospital admission include dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) and dengue shock syndrome (DSS), occurring in approximately 1/1,000 infections [2]. The casefatality rate (CFR) for severe dengue ranges from 20% in some outbreaks to less than 1% [2]. The overall cost of dengue fever was estimated at $39 billion USD per year, including medical care, surveillance, vector control, and lost productivity [2]. A 2016 estimate reported that dengue was responsible for the loss of 1.14 million (0.73–1.98 million) Disability-Adjusted life years (DALYs) in 2013, representing a 58% increase from 1990 [3]

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