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Use of Expansion Factors to Estimate the Burden of Dengue in Southeast Asia: A Systematic Analysis

Eduardo A Undurraga, Yara A Halasa and Donald S Shepard

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2013, vol. 7, issue 2, 1-15

Abstract: Background: Dengue virus infection is the most common arthropod-borne disease of humans and its geographical range and infection rates are increasing. Health policy decisions require information about the disease burden, but surveillance systems usually underreport the total number of cases. These may be estimated by multiplying reported cases by an expansion factor (EF). Methods and Findings: As a key step to estimate the economic and disease burden of dengue in Southeast Asia (SEA), we projected dengue cases from 2001 through 2010 using EFs. We conducted a systematic literature review (1995–2011) and identified 11 published articles reporting original, empirically derived EFs or the necessary data, and 11 additional relevant studies. To estimate EFs for total cases in countries where no empirical studies were available, we extrapolated data based on the statistically significant inverse relationship between an index of a country's health system quality and its observed reporting rate. We compiled an average 386,000 dengue episodes reported annually to surveillance systems in the region, and projected about 2.92 million dengue episodes. We conducted a probabilistic sensitivity analysis, simultaneously varying the most important parameters in 20,000 Monte Carlo simulations, and derived 95% certainty level of 2.73–3.38 million dengue episodes. We estimated an overall EF in SEA of 7.6 (95% certainty level: 7.0–8.8) dengue cases for every case reported, with an EF range of 3.8 for Malaysia to 19.0 in East Timor. Conclusion: Studies that make no adjustment for underreporting would seriously understate the burden and cost of dengue in SEA and elsewhere. As the sites of the empirical studies we identified were not randomly chosen, the exact extent of underreporting remains uncertain. Nevertheless, the results reported here, based on a systematic analysis of the available literature, show general consistency and provide a reasonable empirical basis to adjust for underreporting. Author Summary: Dengue is the most common disease transmitted by a mosquito, with about 100–200 million infections occurring each year in more than 100 tropical and subtropical countries. Policy-makers require accurate information about the number of symptomatic dengue episodes to make informed decisions concerning dengue control strategies. But dengue is usually underreported by national surveillance systems. Through a systematic literature review and analysis of empirical research, we estimated the rate of underreporting and the average annual dengue episodes by treatment (hospitalized and ambulatory) in 2001–2010, for 12 countries in Southeast Asia. We found an average reporting rate of 13.2% of the total symptomatic dengue episodes in the region, leading to an expansion factor of 7.6 for converting reported cases into estimated actual cases. While we focused in Southeast Asia, analogous principles apply to other regions of the world, and other diseases reported through surveillance systems. Estimating the total episodes of dengue is a critical step in studying the economic and disease burden of dengue fever, and the cost-effectiveness evaluation of dengue control and prevention strategies.

Date: 2013
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pntd00:0002056

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0002056

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