Associated risk factors of severe dengue in Reunion Island: A prospective cohort study

Archive ouverte

Carras, Mathys | Maillard, Olivier | Cousty, Julien | Gérardin, Patrick | Boukerrou, Malik | Raffray, Loïc | Mavingui, Patrick | Poubeau, Patrice | Cabie, André | Bertolotti, Antoine

Edité par CCSD ; Public Library of Science -

International audience. Background Since 2018, a dengue epidemic has been raging annually in Reunion Island, which poses the major problem of its morbidity and mortality. However, there is no consensus in the literature on factors associated with severity of illness. The objective of this study was to identify the factors associated with the occurrence of severe dengue (SD) according to the criteria adopted in 2009 by the World Health Organization (WHO), during the 2019 epidemic. Methodology/Principal findings A total of 163 patients with RT-PCR-confirmed dengue were included in a multicenter prospective cohort study in Reunion Island between January and June 2019. Of these, 37 (23%) were classified as SD, which involves presentation dominated by at least one organ failure, and 126 (77%) classified as non-SD (of which 90 (71%) had warning signs). Confusion, dehydration, and relative hypovolemia were significantly associated with SD in bivariate analysis (p < 0.05). The factors associated with SD in multivariate analysis were a time from first symptom to hospital consultation over 2 days (OR: 2.46, CI: 1.42-4.27), a history of cardiovascular disease (OR: 2.75, 95%CI: 1.57-4.80) and being of Western European origin (OR: 17.60, CI: 4.15-74). Conclusions/Significance This study confirms that SD is a frequent cause of hospitalization during dengue epidemics in Reunion Island. It suggests that cardiovascular disease, Western European origin, and delay in diagnosis and management are risk factors associated with SD fever, and that restoration of blood volume and correction of dehydration must be performed early to be effective.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Dengue clinical features and harbingers of severity in the diabetic patient: A retrospective cohort study on Reunion island, 2019

Archive ouverte | Issop, Azizah | CCSD

International audience. Aim: Diabetes mellitus is associated with both the risks of severe dengue and dengue-related deaths, however the factors characterizing dengue in the diabetic patient are ill-recognized. The ...

A Comparative Study of Human Leptospirosis between Mayotte and Reunion Islands Highlights Distinct Clinical and Microbial Features Arising from Distinct Inter-Island Bacterial Ecology

Archive ouverte | Desmoulin, Anissa | CCSD

International audience. Leptospirosis is a neglected zoonosis for which investigations assessing host-pathogen interaction are scarce. The aim of this study was to compare the severity and bacterial species involved...

Gonococcal arthritis: case series of 58 hospital cases

Archive ouverte | Moussiegt, Aurore | CCSD

International audience. ObjectivesExtra-genital manifestations of gonococcal infection are rare (0.5–3%). Among them, gonococcal arthritis (GA) is the most frequent, accounting for 30–90% of disseminated infections....

Chargement des enrichissements...