| Literature DB >> 30898104 |
Priscila Conrado Guerra Nunes1, Regina Paiva Daumas2, Juan Camilo Sánchez-Arcila1, Rita Maria Ribeiro Nogueira3, Marco Aurélio Pereira Horta3, Flávia Barreto Dos Santos4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Over the last 30 years, extensive dengue epidemics have occurred in Brazil, charEntities:
Keywords: 30 years; Brazil; Dengue mortality; Surveillance
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30898104 PMCID: PMC6429821 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-6641-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Dengue cases and dengue fatal cases reported in Brazil in 30 years (1986 to 2015). The bars show the number of dengue cases reported. The numbers of deaths are shown in lines and y axis to the right. The colored squares demonstrate the introduction and re-emergence of the distinct dengue serotypes
Odds Ratio of dengue fatal cases occurred in Brazil from 1987 to 2015, considering the first epidemic year (1986)
| Year | Reported cases | Deaths | OR over 1986 | Confidence interval | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1986 | 46,309 | 5 | – | – | – |
| 1987 | 88,407 | 4 | 0.419 | 0.11–1.56 |
|
| 1988 | 1570 | 0 | 0.000 | 0–32.02 |
|
| 1989 | 5367 | 0 | 0.000 | 0–9.36 |
|
| 1990 | 40,279 | 8 | 1.840 | 0.60–5 |
|
| 1991 | 104,399 | 0 | 0.040 | 0–0.73 |
|
| 1992 | 1696 | 0 | 0.000 | 0–29.64 |
|
| 1993 | 7374 | 0 | 0.000 | 0–6.81 |
|
| 1994 | 56,691 | 11 | 1.797 | 0.62–5.17 |
|
| 1995 | 137,308 | 2 | 0.135 | 0.02–0.69 |
|
| 1996 | 183,762 | 1 | 0.050 | 0–0.43 |
|
| 1997 | 249,239 | 9 | 0.334 | 0.11–0.99 |
|
| 1998 | 507,715 | 10 | 0.182 | 0.06–0.53 |
|
| 1999 | 74,670 | 42 | 5.210 | 2.06–13.17 |
|
| 2000 | 135,228 | 4 | 0.274 | 0.07–1.02 |
|
| 2001 | 385,783 | 44 | 1.056 | 0.42–2.66 |
|
| 2002 | 696,472 | 150 | 1.995 | 0.82–4.86 |
|
| 2003 | 274,975 | 88 | 2.964 | 1.20–7.29 |
|
| 2004 | 70,174 | 18 | 2.376 | 0.88–6.39 |
|
| 2005 | 147,039 | 69 | 4.346 | 1.75–10.77 |
|
| 2006 | 258,680 | 142 | 5.084 | 2.08–12.40 |
|
| 2007 | 496,923 | 290 | 5.405 | 2.23–13.08 |
|
| 2008 | 632,680 | 561 | 8.212 | 3.40–19.81 |
|
| 2009 | 406,269 | 341 | 7.774 | 3.21–18.80 |
|
| 2010 | 1,011,548 | 656 | 6.006 | 2.49–14.48 |
|
| 2011 | 764,032 | 482 | 5.843 | 2.42–14.10 |
|
| 2012 | 589,591 | 327 | 5.137 | 2.12–12.42 |
|
| 2013 | 1,470,487 | 674 | 4.245 | 1.76–10.23 |
|
| 2014 | 591,080 | 475 | 7.443 | 3.08–17.97 |
|
| 2015 | 1,649,008 | 986 | 5.538 | 2.30–13.34 |
|
Footnote: To compare the Odds Ratio of deaths occurred from 1987 to 2015, we calculated OR values, confidence intervals and P-values, setting the year of 1986 as the comparison year. Values were calculated using GraphPad Prism version 6 software
Fig. 2Five-year dengue mortality rate per state, Brazil, 1986–2015. Mortality rate per 100,000 populations. State abbreviations: Acre (AC); Alagoas (AL); Amapá (AP); Amazonas (AM); Bahia (BA); Ceará (CE); Distrito Federal (DF); Espírito Santo (ES); Goiás (GO); Maranhão (MA); Mato Grosso (MT); Mato Grosso do Sul (MS); Minas Gerais (MG); Pará (PA); Paraíba (PB); Paraná (PR); Pernambuco (PE); Piauí (PI); Roraima (RR); Rondônia (RO); Rio de Janeiro (RJ); Rio Grande do Norte (RN); Rio Grande do Sul (RS); Santa Catarina (SC); São Paulo (SP); Sergipe (SE); Tocantins (TO)
Timeline and characteristics of dengue classifications used over 30 years of dengue fatal cases investigation in Brazil
| Dengue classification | Source | Classifications | Years of use in Brazil |
|---|---|---|---|
| World Health Organization (WHO), 1997 | World Health Organization (WHO), after a study based on dengue on children in Thailand in the 1950s and 1960s, with modifications in 1986 and 1997 [ | DHF and DSS | From 1986 to 2000 |
| Ministry of Health of Brazil, 2000 | Brazilian Ministry of Health, used to define dengue severe cases that did not meet the WHO criteria for DHF / DSS. Used only in Brazil. | DCC | From 2000 to 2013 |
| WHO, 2009 | World Health Organization (WHO), based on the results of a multicenter study (DENCO) conducted in Southeast Asia and Latin America to assess the limitations of the 1997 classification. | DwWS and SD | From 2014 to present |
DHF: Dengue haemorraghic fever, DSS: Dengue shock syndrome, DCC: Dengue with complications, DwWS: Dengue with warning signs, SD: Severe dengue
Fig. 3(a) 30-year dengue cases fatality rate by DHF, DCC, DwWS and SD and (b) distribution of mortality rates (per 100,000 populations) by age and year of occurrence, Brazil, 1986–2015. In Fig. A: Dengue case fatality rate is demonstrated in percentage (%). The bars show the fatality rate by the Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF) and Severe Dengue (SD) classifications. Dengue cases fatality rate with Dengue with Complications (DCC) and Dengue with Warning Signs (DwWS) are shown in lines. The axes y left are of the rates by the classification of DHF and DCC, whereas the axis y right are the values of the rates classified with SD and DwWs
Fig. 4Five-year dengue case fatality rate per state from 1986 to 2015, Brazil. Case fatality rate by (a) DHF; (b) by DCC; (c) by DwWS and (d) by SD. Dengue case fatality rate is demonstrated in percentage (%). DHF: Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever; DCC: Dengue with Complications; DwWS: Dengue with Warning Signs; SD: Severe Dengue. State abbreviations: Acre (AC); Alagoas (AL); Amapá (AP); Amazonas (AM); Bahia (BA); Ceará (CE); Distrito Federal (DF); Espírito Santo (ES); Goiás (GO); Maranhão (MA); Mato Grosso (MT); Mato Grosso do Sul (MS); Minas Gerais (MG); Pará (PA); Paraíba (PB); Paraná (PR); Pernambuco (PE); Piauí (PI); Roraima (RR); Rondônia (RO); Rio de Janeiro (RJ); Rio Grande do Norte (RN); Rio Grande do Sul (RS); Santa Catarina (SC); São Paulo (SP); Sergipe (SE); Tocantins (TO)