Prospective applicability study of the new dengue classification system for clinical management in children.

Pediatr Infect Dis J

From the *Departamento de Pediatría, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Avda. Venezuela y Florida, Asunción; and †Universidad Nacional de Asunción, Barrio Villa Universitaria, San Lorenzo, Paraguay.

Published: September 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assesses the effectiveness of the 2009 WHO dengue classification system for identifying cases needing intervention during a dengue outbreak in Paraguay.
  • Out of 123 children admitted, 97% were classified as needing intervention using the 2009 criteria, compared to only 54% with the 1997 criteria.
  • The findings indicate that the 2009 system is more accurate in detecting severe dengue cases, with a significant increase in identified severe cases compared to the previous classification.

Article Abstract

Background: To evaluate the efficacy of the 2009 revised dengue classification system proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO) for early detection of dengue cases requiring intervention.

Methods: Children <15 years of age with dengue [confirmed by laboratory testing (IgM enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, NS1 Ag or reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction) or by epidemiologic link] who were admitted to the Institute of Tropical Medicine during the 2011 dengue outbreak in Paraguay were prospectively included. Each case was classified according to the 1997 WHO dengue criteria and by the 2009 WHO revised criteria, which categorize dengue patients using a set of clinical finding into dengue with/without warning signs and severe dengue. The management of all cases followed the new recommendations.

Results: During the 2011 dengue outbreak, 123 children were admitted with a mean age of 11 ± 3 years. By the 2009 classification system, 119 cases (97%) were classified as dengue requiring intervention [89 patients (75%) with warning signs and 30 patients (25%) with severe signs], whereas by the old system 67 patients (54%) were classified as dengue requiring intervention (P < 0.001). Further, by the 1997 classification, only 13 patients (10%) were classified as dengue hemorrhagic fever III/IV (severe cases), whereas with the 2009 classification 30 patients (24%) were considered as having severe dengue infection (P < 0.05) CONCLUSIONS:: This study confirms that the 2009 WHO dengue classification provides better detection of severe cases of dengue than the earlier 1997 WHO dengue system.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/INF.0000000000000340DOI Listing

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