| Literature DB >> 32211772 |
Joshua Nealon1, Alain Bouckenooghe2, Margarita Cortes3, Laurent Coudeville1, Carina Frago2, Denis Macina1, Clarence C Tam4,5,6.
Abstract
Dengue endemicity varies but comparative, multicountry data are extremely limited. An improved understanding is needed to prioritize prevention, including vaccination, which is currently recommended only under specific epidemiological conditions. We used serological study data from 46 geographical sites in 13 countries to estimate dengue force of infection (FOI, the proportion of children seroconverting per year) under assumptions of either age-constant or age-varying FOI, and the age at which 50% and 80% of children had been infected. After exclusions, 13 661 subjects were included. Estimated constant FOI varied widely, from 1.7% (Singapore) to 24.1% (the Philippines). In the site-level analysis 44 sites (96%) reached 50% seroconversion and 35 sites (75%) reached 80% seroconversion by age 18 years, with significant heterogeneity. These findings confirm that children living in dengue-endemic countries receive intense early dengue exposure, increasing risk of secondary infection, and imply serosurveys at fine spatial resolutions are needed to inform vaccination campaigns.Entities:
Keywords: dengue; endemicity; epidemiology; infectious disease transmission; seroprevalence; vaccines
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 32211772 PMCID: PMC8730486 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiaa132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Site Description and Data (Country-Level Analysis)
| Country | Sites | No. of sites | Studies | n | Age Range, y | First Enrollment | Last Enrollment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | Delhi, Pune, Ludhiana, Bangalore, West Bengal, Wardha, Mumbai, Hyderabad | 8 | CYD47,a DNG10b | 2562 | 5–18.7 | Jan 11 | Oct 12 |
| Indonesia | Bali, West Java, Jakarta, Aceh, North Sumatera, West Sumatera, Jambi, Lampung, Banten, Central Java, East Java, East Kalimantan, South Sulawesi, Southeast Sulawesi | 14 | CYD14,c DNG26b | 3539 | 1–18.9 | Jun 11 | Nov 14 |
| Malaysia | Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Ipoh (Perak), Seremban (Negeri Sembilan), Kuching | 5 | CYD14,c CYD32a | 547 | 2–14.8 | Dec 10 | Sep 11 |
| Philippines | San Pablo (Region IV-A) | 1 | CYD08,a CYD14a | 820 | 0.9–14.9 | Jan 10 | Jul 11 |
| Singapore | Singapore | 1 | CYD28a | 384 | 2–18 | Apr 09 | Oct 09 |
| Thailand | Ratchaburi, Kamphaeng Phet | 2 | CYD14,c CYD23c | 637 | 2–14.8 | Feb 09 | Nov 11 |
| Vietnam | Long Xuyen (An Giang), My Tho (Tien Giang) | 2 | CYD14,c CYD22a | 607 | 2–18.7 | Mar 09 | Oct 11 |
| Brazil | Nordeste, Espirito Santo, Goias, Mato Grosso Sud | 4 | CYD15,c CYD30a | 450 | 8.9–16.9 | Aug 10 | Nov 11 |
| Colombia | Santander, Quindio, Cundinamarca, Meta, Casanare, Cali | 6 | CYD13,a CYD15,c CYD29a | 1518 | 0.9–16.9 | Oct 09 | Mar 12 |
| Honduras | Tegucigalpa | 1 | CYD13,a CYD15c | 455 | 9–16.9 | Oct 09 | Sep 11 |
| Mexico | San Luis, Veracruz, Morelos, Yucatan, Guerrero, Nuevo León | 6 | CYD13,a CYD15,c CYD33a | 1213 | 0.6–16.9 | Nov 09 | Jul 12 |
| Peru | Peru | 1 | CYD24,a CYD29a | 671 | 0.9–11.9 | Sep 08 | Mar 12 |
| Puerto Rico | Puerto Rico | 1 | CYD13,a CYD15c | 258 | 9–16.9 | Nov 09 | Oct 11 |
aClinical trial.
Epidemiological study.
cEfficacy trial.
Figure 1.Study flow chart.
Constant and Age-Varying FOI Estimates for Each Country
| Country | Constant FOI (95% CI) | Age-Varying FOI (95% CI) | Corresponding Age Range, y | Better Fita |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | 11.9 (8.7–16.2) | 10.7 (6.9–14.4)20.0 (10.7–29.4) | 5–6 7–18 | Constant |
| Indonesia | 14.7 (12.8–16.9) | 15.1 (13.1–17.1)4.1 (−3.9 to 12.2) | 1–1314–18 | Constant |
| Malaysia | 8.6 (6.7–10.9) | 12.2 (11.3–13.1)4.7 (−0.2 to 9.6) | 2–34–14 | Constant |
| Philippines | 24.1 (21.8–26.5) | 42.6 (35.4–49.7)13.5 (10.1–16.9) | 0–12–14 | Age-varying |
| Singapore | 1.7 (1.4–2.2) | 6.6 (4.0–9.2)−0.8 (−2.0 to 0.3) | 2–34–18 | Age-varying |
| Thailand | 14.8 (13.7–16.0) | 16.4 (15.0–17.9)8.7 (6.6–10.9) | 2–67–14 | Age-varying |
| Vietnam | 11.4 (10.2–12.8) | 17.3 (16.5–18.1)5.4 (3.8–7.0) | 2–34–18 | Constant |
| Brazil | 10.7 (7.7–14.8) | 9.2 (5.6–12.9)23.1 (20.3–25.9) | 8–1011–16 | Constant |
| Colombia | 18.4 (14.2–23.7) | 18.7 (13.1–24.3)9.9 (−25.9 to −45.8) | 0–1213–16 | Constant |
| Honduras | 17.5 (15.6–19.7) | 17.8 (14.8–20.8)15.1 (1.8–32.1) | 9–1011–16 | Constant |
| Mexico | 7.1 (5.1–9.8) | 7.7 (4.8–10.5)−0.2 (−8.6 to 8.1) | 0–1112–16 | Age-varying |
| Peru | 9.2 (8.0–10.7) | 13.2 (10.2–16.2)4.5 (1.7–7.2) | 0–23–11 | Constant |
| Puerto Rico | 8.4 (7.2–9.9) | 8.8 (7.1–10.5)2.8 (−13.3 to 18.8) | 9–1314–16 | Age-varying |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; FOI, force of infection; RMSE, lower root mean squared error.
aFor each country the better model fit was assigned based on the lower RMSE.
Figure 2.Observed seroprevalence by age (circles) and 95% confidence interval (CI), adjusted for clustering (spikes) and estimate seroprevalence assuming constant force of infection (FOI) (solid line) and 95% CIs (shaded area). Dotted lines correspond to estimated seroprevalence under an assumption of age-varying FOI.
Ages at Which 50% and 80% of Children Become Dengue Seropositive, Per Country, Using Constant or Age-Varying Models
| Median Age at Seroconversion, y (95% CI) | 80th Percentile Age at Seroconversion, y (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Country | Constant Model | Age-Varying Model | Constant Model | Age-Varying Model |
| India |
| 6.5 (6.0–6.9) |
| 11.1 (8.8–17.4) |
| Indonesia |
| 4.6 (4.4–4.8) |
| 10.6 (10.1–11.2) |
| Malaysia |
| 9.2 (5.9–>18) |
| >18 |
| Philippines | 2.9 (2.6–3.2) |
| 6.7 (6.1–7.4) |
|
| Singapore | >18 |
| >18 |
|
| Thailand | 4.7 (4.2–5.2) |
| 10.9 (9.8–12.0) |
|
| Vietnam |
| 5.1 (4.3–6.5) |
| >18 |
| Brazil |
| 7.5 (6.4–9.1) |
| 13.3 (11.9–17.4) |
| Colombia |
| 3.7 (3.4–4.1) |
| 8.6 (7.9–9.4) |
| Honduras |
| 3.9 (3.3–4.7) |
| 9.0 (7.7–10.9) |
| Mexico | 9.8 (8.8–10.9) |
| >18 |
|
| Peru |
| 10.6 (6.5–28.8) |
| >18 |
| Puerto Rico | 8.2 (7.0–9.6) |
| >18 |
|
Best-fitting models are highlighted in bold.
Figure 3.Age of 80% seroconversion by site, estimated from best-fitting constant (circles) or age-varying (diamonds) models. Symbol size corresponds to frequency weights. ≥19 signifies estimates were outside the range of our data.