Emerging Infectious Diseases (Apr 2020)

Severe Dengue Epidemic, Sri Lanka, 2017

  • Hasitha A. Tissera,
  • Bernard D.W. Jayamanne,
  • Rajendra Raut,
  • Sakunthala M.D. Janaki,
  • Yesim Tozan,
  • Preshila C. Samaraweera,
  • Prasad Liyanage,
  • Azhar Ghouse,
  • Chaturaka Rodrigo,
  • Aravinda M. de Silva,
  • Sumadhya D. Fernando

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2604.190435
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 4
pp. 682 – 691

Abstract

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In 2017, a dengue epidemic of unexpected magnitude occurred in Sri Lanka. A total of 186,101 suspected cases and 440 dengue-related deaths occurred. We conducted a comprehensive analysis of this epidemic by comparing national surveillance data for 2017 with data from the preceding 5 years. In all Sri Lanka districts, dengue incidence in 2017 increased significantly over incidence during the previous 5 years. Older schoolchildren and young adults were more clinically symptomatic than those at extremes of age. Limited virologic surveillance showed the dominant circulating variant was dengue virus type 2 cosmopolitan genotype in the most affected district. One quarter of total annual cases were reported 5 weeks after the southwest monsoon started. Changes in vector abundance were not predictive of the increased incidence. Direct government expenditures on dengue control activities in 2017 were US $12.7 million. The lessons learned from this outbreak are useful for other tropical nations facing increasing dengue incidence.

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