Abstract

.Dengue is endemic in Brazil. The dengue surveillance system’s reliance on passive reporting may underestimate disease incidence and cannot detect asymptomatic/pauci-symptomatic cases. In this 3-year prospective cohort study (NCT01391819) in 5- to 13-year-old children from nine schools in Fortaleza (N = 2,117), we assessed dengue virus (DENV) infection seroprevalence by IgG indirect ELISA at yearly visits and disease incidence through active and enhanced passive surveillance. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) and DENV IgM/IgG capture ELISA were used for diagnosis. We further characterized confirmed and probable cases with a plaque reduction neutralization test. At enrollment, 54.1% (95% CI: 46.6, 61.4) of children were DENV IgG positive. The annual incidence of laboratory-confirmed symptomatic dengue cases was 11.0 (95% CI: 7.3, 14.7), 18.1 (10.4, 25.7), and 10.2 (0.7, 19.7), and of laboratory-confirmed or probable dengue cases with neutralizing antibody profile evocative of dengue exposure was 13.2 (6.6, 19.9), 18.7 (5.3, 32.2), and 8.4 (2.4, 19.2) per 1,000 child-years in 2012, 2013, and 2014, respectively. By RT-qPCR, we identified 14 DENV-4 cases in 2012–2013 and seven DENV-1 cases in 2014. During the course of the study, 32.8% of dengue-naive children experienced a primary infection. Primary inapparent dengue infection was detected in 20.3% (95% CI: 13.6, 29.1) of dengue-naive children in 2012, 8.7% (6.9, 10.9) in 2013, and 5.1% (4.4, 6.0) in 2014. Our results confirmed the high dengue endemicity in Fortaleza, with active and enhanced passive surveillance detecting three to five times more cases than the National System of Disease Notification.

Highlights

  • Half of the world’s population lives in regions at risk of dengue infections.[1,2] Dengue is mostly encountered in tropical and subtropical countries.[1]

  • The primary and secondary caregivers of 21.1% and 7.0% of children with confirmed symptomatic dengue, respectively, missed work because of the illness of their child, with a median duration of 1.5 days. This is the first large longitudinal pediatric cohort study assessing the burden of dengue disease in a school population in Brazil

  • A multicenter cohort study was conducted in 3,000 children aged 9–16 years across 20 sites in Latin America, among which five were in Brazil.[9]

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Summary

Introduction

Half of the world’s population lives in regions at risk of dengue infections.[1,2] Dengue is mostly encountered in tropical and subtropical countries.[1]. In 2019, 2.2 million cases were reported, representing a 10-fold increase compared with 2018.7

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