| Literature DB >> 19392949 |
Abstract
Dengue is the most common arthropod-borne infection worldwide, affecting at least 50 million people every year and endemic in more than 100 countries. The dengue virus is a single-stranded RNA virus with four major serotypes. Infection with one serotype confers homotypic immunity but not heterologous immunity, and secondary infection with another serotype may lead to more severe disease. The major route of transmission occurs through the Aedes aegypti mosquito vector, but dengue has also been transmitted through blood transfusion and organ transplantation. Infection results in a spectrum of clinical illness ranging from asymptomatic infection, undifferentiated fever, dengue fever, dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF) to dengue shock syndrome (DSS). Dengue is spreading rapidly to new areas and with increasing frequency of major outbreaks. A trend has also been observed towards increasing age among infected patients. This will impact blood supply availability as more blood donors are deferred because of dengue infection or exposure to infection. The risk of transmission through transfusion of blood from asymptomatic viraemic donors will also increase. Although screening tests for dengue and effective pathogen reduction processes are now available for the blood supply, the value of implementing these costly measures needs to be carefully considered. Demand for platelets and fresh frozen plasma will rise with increasing number of DHF/DSS. Evidence-based guidelines for the clinical use of these blood components in the management of patients with DHF/DSS have not been well established, and inappropriate use will contribute to the challenges faced by blood services.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19392949 PMCID: PMC2713854 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3148.2009.00916.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transfus Med ISSN: 0958-7578 Impact factor: 2.019
World Health Organization case definition for DHF and DSS*
| The following must be present: |
| Fever or history of acute fever lasting 2–7 days, occasionally biphasic |
| Haemorrhagic tendencies, evidenced by at least one of the following: |
| A positive tourniquet test |
| Petechiae, ecchymoses or purpura |
| Bleeding from the mucosa, gastrointestinal tract, injection sites or other locations |
| Haematemesis or melaena |
| Thrombocytopenia (100 000 cells mm−3 or less) |
| Evidence of plasma leakage because of increased vascular permeability, manifested by at least one of the following: |
| A rise in the haematocrit equal to or greater than 20% above average for age, sex and population |
| A drop in the haematocrit following volume replacement treatment equal to or greater than 20% of baseline |
| Signs of plasma leakage such as pleural effusion, ascites and hypoproteinaemia |
| All the above four criteria for DHF must be present plus evidence of circulatory failure manifested by: |
| Rapid and weak pulse |
| Narrow pulse pressure [<20 mmHg (2·7 kPa)] |
| Or manifested by: |
| Hypotension for age |
| Cold, clammy skin and restlessness |
From World Health Organization (1997).
World Health Organization grading severity of DHF*
| Grade I | Fever accompanied by nonspecific constitutional symptoms; the only haemorrhagic manifestation is a positive tourniquet test and/or easy bruising |
| Grade II | Spontaneous bleeding in addition to the manifestations of grade I patients, usually in the forms of skin or other haemorrhages |
| Grade III | Circulatory failure manifested by a rapid, weak pulse and narrowing of pulse pressure or hypotension, with the presence of cold, clammy skin and restlessness |
| Grade IV | Profound shock with undetectable blood pressure or pulse |
From World Health Organization (1997).
Dengue and donor deferral
| Country | Donor deferral measures for dengue |
|---|---|
| Singapore | 6 months deferral for history of dengue infection |
| 3 weeks deferral for history of fever | |
| No travel-related deferral for dengue | |
| Hong Kong | 6 months deferral for history of dengue infection |
| 2 weeks deferral for history of fever | |
| No travel-related deferral for dengue | |
| Sri Lanka | No specific deferral for history of dengue infection |
| 2 weeks deferral for history of fever | |
| No travel-related deferral for dengue | |
| Australia | 4 weeks deferral for history of dengue infection |
| No travel-related deferral for dengue | |
| New Zealand | 4 weeks deferral for history of dengue infection |
| No travel-related deferral for dengue | |
| UK | 2 weeks deferral for history of dengue infection |
| No travel-related deferral for dengue | |
| United States | 4 weeks deferral for history of dengue infection |
| No travel-related deferral for dengue |
Endemic for dengue.
Non-endemic except parts of Northern Australia.
Non-endemic.
Options for minimizing dengue risk in the blood supply
| Strategies | Endemic countries | Non-endemic countries |
|---|---|---|
| No specific measures taken for dengue | Risk of transfusion-transmitted dengue increased, dependent on prevalence in donor population and proportion of donors with asymptomatic infection | Risk of transfusion-transmitted dengue low, dependent on proportion of donor population who may recently be exposed to dengue infection through travel |
| No direct cost to blood service, but indirect cost from patient morbidity from transfusion-transmitted infection and loss of confidence in blood supply safety | No direct cost to blood service, but indirect cost from loss of confidence in blood supply safety in event of a transfusion-transmitted infection occurring | |
| Donor qualification – deferral of at-risk donors, e.g. symptoms of fever, travel history, exposure to dengue patients, etc. | Deferral based on exposure not feasible when disease is endemic, unable to exclude early and asymptomatic infection | Deferral based on exposure feasible, able to reduce risk of accepting donations from early and asymptomatic infected donors |
| Nonspecific, leads to high donor loss | Low donor loss, dependent on proportion of donor population likely to travel to endemic countries | |
| Low cost-effectiveness | Cost-effective | |
| NAT testing of donations for dengue | Able to detect asymptomatic infection | Able to detect asymptomatic infection |
| Donor loss dependent on specificity of test system | Donor loss dependent on specificity of test system | |
| Expensive | Expensive | |
| Cost-effectiveness depends on prevalence of asymptomatic infected donors | Low cost-effectiveness | |
| Pathogen reduction | Able to reduce transmission risks | Able to reduce transmission risks |
| Expensive and only available for platelets and plasma currently. May result in reduced product yields | Expensive and only available for platelets and plasma currently. May result in reduced product yields | |
| Low cost-effectiveness for dengue alone | Low cost-effectiveness for dengue alone | |
| Increased cost-effectiveness depends on ability to reduce risks of other transfusion-transmitted diseases as well | Increased cost-effectiveness depends on ability to reduce risks of other transfusion-transmitted diseases as well |
Fig. 1Comparison of platelet usage with number of dengue cases in Singapore in 2005.