Markers of prolonged hospitalisation in severe dengue

Author:

Recker MarioORCID,Fleischmann Wim A.,Nghia Trinh Huu,Truong Nguyen Van,Nam Le Van,Duc Anh Do,Song Le Huu,The Nguyen Trong,Anh Chu Xuan,Hoang Nguyen Viet,My Truong Nhat,Toan Nguyen Linh,Kremsner Peter G.,Velavan Thirumalaisamy P.

Abstract

Background Dengue is one of the most common diseases in the tropics and subtropics. Whilst mortality is a rare event when adequate supportive care can be provided, a large number of patients get hospitalised with dengue every year that places a heavy burden on local health systems. A better understanding of the support required at the time of hospitalisation is therefore of critical importance for healthcare planning, especially when resources are limited during major outbreaks. Methods Here we performed a retrospective analysis of clinical data from over 1500 individuals hospitalised with dengue in Vietnam between 2017 and 2019. Using a broad panel of potential biomarkers, we sought to evaluate robust predictors of prolonged hospitalisation periods. Results Our analyses revealed a lead-time bias, whereby early admission to hospital correlates with longer hospital stays ‐ irrespective of disease severity. Importantly, taking into account the symptom duration prior to hospitalisation significantly affects observed associations between hospitalisation length and previously reported risk markers of prolonged stays, which themselves showed marked inter-annual variations. Once corrected for symptom duration, age, temperature at admission and elevated neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio were found predictive of longer hospitalisation periods. Conclusion This study demonstrates that the time since dengue symptom onset is one of the most significant predictors for the length of hospital stays, independent of the assigned severity score. Pre-hospital symptom durations need to be accounted for to evaluate clinically relevant biomarkers of dengue hospitalisation trajectories.

Funder

German Academic Exchange Service

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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