Combination of inflammatory and vascular markers in the febrile phase of dengue is associated with more severe outcomes
Abstract
Background: Early identification of severe dengue patients is important regarding patient management and resource allocation. We investigated the association of ten biomarkers (VCAM-1, SDC-1, Ang-2, IL-8, IP-10, IL-1RA, sCD163, sTREM-1, ferritin, CRP) with the development of severe/moderate dengue (S/MD).
Methods: We performed a nested case-control study from a multi-country study. A total of 281 S/MD and 556 uncomplicated dengue cases were included.
Results: On days 1-3 from symptom onset, higher levels of any biomarker increased the risk of developing S/MD. When assessing together, SDC-1 and IL-1RA were stable, while IP-10 changed the association from positive to negative; others showed weaker associations. The best combinations associated with S/MD comprised IL-1RA, Ang-2, IL-8, ferritin, IP-10, and SDC-1 for children, and SDC-1, IL-8, ferritin, sTREM-1, IL-1RA, IP-10, and sCD163 for adults.
Conclusions: Our findings assist the development of biomarker panels for clinical use and could improve triage and risk prediction in dengue patients.
Data availability
All data generated or analysed during this study have been deposited in the Oxford Research Archive (ORA) at https://doi.org/10.5287/bodleian:JN2wXDpjq
Article and author information
Author details
Funding
European Union's Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration (FP7-281803 IDAMS)
- Thomas Jaenisch
World Health Organization (UNICEF/UNDP/ World Bank/WHO Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases)
- Sophie Yacoub
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Trust (The Global Good Fund I,LLC at Intellectual Ventures)
- Sophie Yacoub
The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.
Reviewing Editor
- Balram Bhargava, Indian Council of Medical Research, India
Ethics
Human subjects: The study and the blood sample analysis were approved by the Scientific and Ethics Committees of all study sites (Hospital for Tropical Diseases [Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam] Ref No 03/HDDD-05/01/2018; Angkor Hospital for Children [Siem Reap, Cambodia] Ref No 0146/18-AHC; University of Malaya Medical Centre [Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia] Ref No 201865-6361) and by the Oxford Tropical Research Ethics Committee (OxTREC Ref No 502-18).
Version history
- Received: February 11, 2021
- Accepted: June 11, 2021
- Accepted Manuscript published: June 22, 2021 (version 1)
- Version of Record published: August 3, 2021 (version 2)
Copyright
© 2021, Vuong et al.
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License permitting unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
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