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Featured researches published by Khoa T. D. Thai.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2005

Seroprevalence of dengue antibodies, annual incidence and risk factors among children in southern Vietnam

Khoa T. D. Thai; Tran Quang Binh; Phan Trong Giao; Hoang Lan Phuong; Le Quoc Hung; Nguyen Van Nam; Tran Thi Thanh Nga; Jan Groen; Nico Nagelkerke; Peter J. de Vries

Dengue is highly endemic in southern Vietnam and all four serotypes of dengue virus have already been identified. To determine the age‐specific prevalence of dengue and associated risk factors, we conducted a serological study at two primary schools and assessed risk factors by analysing childrens questionnaires and household surveys. Sera were collected from 961 primary schoolchildren in Binh Thuan Province and tested for the presence of dengue virus serum antibodies using an indirect immunoglobulin G (IgG) enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The antibody prevalence of the total population was 65.7% (n = 631) which increased from 53.0 to 88.2% with age. The annual incidence of a first dengue infection, estimated by binary regression of the seroprevalence by age, was 11.7%. Interestingly, the prevalence of dengue IgG antibodies was significantly higher in children who confirmed using a pit latrine (RR 1.467, 95% CI: 1.245–1.730) and whose domestic environment contained discarded cans (RR 1.238, 95% CI: 1.042–1.470) and pigs (RR 1.228, 95% CI: 1.002–1.504). The epidemiology of dengue in southern Vietnam is stable with a constantly high annual incidence of first infections. Transmission occurs mainly peri‐domestically, which has important public health implications.


Journal of Virology | 2012

High-resolution analysis of intrahost genetic diversity in dengue virus serotype 1 infection identifies mixed infections.

Khoa T. D. Thai; Matthew R. Henn; Michael C. Zody; Vianney Tricou; Nguyen Minh Nguyet; Patrick Charlebois; Niall J. Lennon; Lisa Green; Peter J. de Vries; Tran Thinh Hien; Jeremy Farrar; H. Rogier van Doorn; Menno D. de Jong; Bruce W. Birren; Edward C. Holmes; Cameron P. Simmons

ABSTRACT Little is known about the rate at which genetic variation is generated within intrahost populations of dengue virus (DENV) and what implications this diversity has for dengue pathogenesis, disease severity, and host immunity. Previous studies of intrahost DENV variation have used a low frequency of sampling and/or experimental methods that do not fully account for errors generated through amplification and sequencing of viral RNAs. We investigated the extent and pattern of genetic diversity in sequence data in domain III (DIII) of the envelope (E) gene in serial plasma samples (n = 49) taken from 17 patients infected with DENV type 1 (DENV-1), totaling some 8,458 clones. Statistically rigorous approaches were employed to account for artifactual variants resulting from amplification and sequencing, which we suggest have played a major role in previous studies of intrahost genetic variation. Accordingly, nucleotide sequence diversities of viral populations were very low, with conservative estimates of the average levels of genetic diversity ranging from 0 to 0.0013. Despite such sequence conservation, we observed clear evidence for mixed infection, with the presence of multiple phylogenetically distinct lineages present within the same host, while the presence of stop codon mutations in some samples suggests the action of complementation. In contrast to some previous studies we observed no relationship between the extent and pattern of DENV-1 genetic diversity and disease severity, immune status, or level of viremia.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2013

Spatiotemporal Dynamics of Dengue Epidemics, Southern Vietnam

Nguyen Thanh Vu; Bernard Cazelles; Maciej F. Boni; Khoa T. D. Thai; Maia A. Rabaa; Luong Chan Quang; Cameron P. Simmons; Tran Ngoc Huu; Katherine L. Anders

An improved understanding of heterogeneities in dengue virus transmission might provide insights into biological and ecologic drivers and facilitate predictions of the magnitude, timing, and location of future dengue epidemics. To investigate dengue dynamics in urban Ho Chi Minh City and neighboring rural provinces in Vietnam, we analyzed a 10-year monthly time series of dengue surveillance data from southern Vietnam. The per capita incidence of dengue was lower in Ho Chi Minh City than in most rural provinces; annual epidemics occurred 1–3 months later in Ho Chi Minh City than elsewhere. The timing and the magnitude of annual epidemics were significantly more correlated in nearby districts than in remote districts, suggesting that local biological and ecologic drivers operate at a scale of 50–100 km. Dengue incidence during the dry season accounted for 63% of variability in epidemic magnitude. These findings can aid the targeting of vector-control interventions and the planning for dengue vaccine implementation.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2011

Age-Specificity of Clinical Dengue during Primary and Secondary Infections

Khoa T. D. Thai; Hiroshi Nishiura; Phuong Lan Hoang; Nga Thanh Thi Tran; Giao Trong Phan; Hung Quoc Le; Binh Quang Tran; Nam Van Nguyen; Peter J. de Vries

Background This study aims to estimate the age-specific risks of clinical dengue attack (i.e., the risk of symptomatic dengue among the total number of dengue virus (DENV) infections) during primary and secondary infections. Methods We analyzed two pieces of epidemiological information in Binh Thuan province, southern Vietnam, i.e., age-specific seroprevalence and a community-wide longitudinal study of clinical dengue attack. The latter data set stratified febrile patients with DENV infection by age as well as infection parity. A simple modeling approach was employed to estimate the age-specific risks of clinical dengue attack during primary and secondary infections. Results Using the seroprevalence data, the force of infection was estimated to be 11.7% (95% confidence intervals (CI): 10.8–12.7) per year. Median age (and the 25–75 percentiles) of dengue fever patients during primary and secondary infections were 12 (9–20) and 20 (14–31) years, respectively. The estimated age-specific risk of clinical dengue increases as a function of age for both primary and secondary infections; the estimated proportion of symptomatic patients among the total number of infected individuals was estimated to be <7% for those aged <10 years for both primary and secondary infections, but increased as patients become older, reaching to 8–11% by the age of 20 years. Conclusions/Significance For both primary and secondary infections, higher age at DENV infection was shown to result in higher risk of clinical attack. Age as an important modulator of clinical dengue explains recent increase in dengue notifications in ageing countries in Southeast Asia, and moreover, poses a paradoxical problem of an increase in adult patients resulting from a decline in the force of infection, which may be caused by various factors including time-dependent variations in epidemiological, ecological and demographic dynamics.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2011

Quantifying the Emergence of Dengue in Hanoi, Vietnam: 1998-2009

Nguyen Tran Hien; Tran Nhu Duong; Tran Vu Phong; Nguyen Nhat Cam; Jeremy Farrar; Vu Sinh Nam; Khoa T. D. Thai; Peter Horby

Background An estimated 2.4 billion people live in areas at risk of dengue transmission, therefore the factors determining the establishment of endemic dengue in areas where transmission suitability is marginal is of considerable importance. Hanoi, Vietnam is such an area, and following a large dengue outbreak in 2009, we set out to determine if dengue is emerging in Hanoi. Methods and Principal Findings We undertook a temporal and spatial analysis of 25,983 dengue cases notified in Hanoi between 1998 and 2009. Age standardized incidence rates, standardized age of infection, and Standardized Morbidity Ratios (SMR) were calculated. A quasi-Poisson regression model was used to determine if dengue incidence was increasing over time. Wavelet analysis was used to explore the periodicity of dengue transmission and the association with climate variables. After excluding the two major outbreak years of 1998 and 2009 and correcting for changes in population age structure, we identified a significant annual increase in the incidence of dengue cases over the period 1999–2008 (incidence rate ratio  = 1.38, 95% confidence interval  = 1.20–1.58, p value  = 0.002). The age of notified dengue cases in Hanoi is high, with a median age of 23 years (mean 26.3 years). After adjusting for changes in population age structure, there was no statistically significant change in the median or mean age of dengue cases over the period studied. Districts in the central, highly urban, area of Hanoi have the highest incidence of dengue (SMR>3). Conclusions Hanoi is a low dengue transmission setting where dengue incidence has been increasing year on year since 1999. This trend needs to be confirmed with serological surveys, followed by studies to determine the underlying drivers of this emergence. Such studies can provide insights into the biological, demographic, and environmental changes associated with vulnerability to the establishment of endemic dengue.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2006

Seroepidemiology of leptospirosis in southern Vietnamese children.

Khoa T. D. Thai; Tran Quang Binh; Phan Trong Giao; Hoang Lan Phuong; Le Quoc Hung; Nguyen Van Nam; Tran Thi Thanh Nga; Marga G. A. Goris; Peter J. de Vries

Objective  To estimate the seroprevalence of human leptospirosis in southern Vietnam.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2007

Evaluation of Two Rapid Immunochromatographic Assays for Diagnosis of Dengue among Vietnamese Febrile Patients

Tran Thi Thanh Nga; Khoa T. D. Thai; Hoang Lan Phuong; Phan Trong Giao; Le Quoc Hung; Tran Quang Binh; Vo Thi Chi Mai; Nguyen Van Nam; Peter J. de Vries

ABSTRACT Results from two dengue rapid tests, the PanBio Duo cassette and the SD Bioline strip test, were compared to those of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (Focus Diagnostics) from sera of 200 Vietnamese febrile patients. The PanBio assay was superior, with sensitivity and specificity values for acute-phase serum samples of 54% and 70% (immunoglobulin M) and 70% and 88% (immunoglobulin G), respectively.


Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2009

Detection of dengue nonstructural 1 (NS1) protein in Vietnamese patients with fever

Hoang Lan Phuong; Khoa T. D. Thai; Tran Thi Thanh Nga; Phan Trong Giao; Le Q. Hung; Tran Quang Binh; Nguyen Van Nam; Jan Groen; Peter J. de Vries

Diagnosing dengue in febrile patients is challenging. Of a total of 459 patients with acute undifferentiated fever, randomly selected from 12 primary health facilities and 1 clinic of the provincial malaria station in southern Vietnam, dengue-specific antibody (Ab) and NS1Ag enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) (Platelia, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA 94547, US) were performed on acute (t0) and convalescent (t3 weeks) sera. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used for confirmation. Based on a composite of the NS1Ag-ELISA, Ab-ELISA, and PCR results, 54 (12%) patients had acute dengue. Positive and negative predictive values were 65% and 98% for the Ab-based diagnosis and 91% and 92% for NS1Ag, respectively. The agreement between Ab- and NS1Ag-based diagnosis was poor (kappa value, 0.2). Two patients without dengue had detectable NS1Ag on t0 and t3, 1 just above the cutoff value and 1 with very high values. For 5 dengue patients, NS1Ag was still detectable at very high levels at t3. Dengue NS1Ag can be used for early diagnosis of dengue; infrequent false-positive results need further clarification.


Acta Tropica | 2008

Seroepidemiology and serological follow-up of anti-leptospiral IgG in children in Southern Vietnam

Khoa T. D. Thai; Tran Thi Thanh Nga; Hoang Lan Phuong; Phan Trong Giao; Le Quoc Hung; Tran Quang Binh; Nguyen Van Nam; Rudy A. Hartskeerl; Peter J. de Vries

A follow-up study was conducted with 23 months interval to investigate the seroepidemiology and persistence of Leptospira IgG antibodies among healthy children in Binh Thuan province, Southern Vietnam. Sera from 262 children (7-13 years of age) were collected and analysed with a commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for Leptospira IgG. Seroconversion was observed in 10.4% (22 of 211, 95% CI: 5.6-26.7) of the children, of whom 18 (8.5%) had probably and four (1.9%) had certainly been exposed to Leptospira. Based on the reduction of sero-negatives of 1.9% among children who have been certainly exposed, the annual seroconversion rate, a measure of the incidence rate of Leptospira infections, corresponds to 0.99% (95% CI: 0.39-2.52). In 61% (31 of 51, 95% CI: 47.1-73.0) of the children with past-infection, Leptospira IgG antibodies remain detectable after 2 years. Data from this study indicate that IgG antibody responses against Leptospira may persist at least for 2 years in children without manifestations of leptospirosis. Results of study uncover the true incidence of leptospirosis infection, the dynamics of waxing and waning antibody concentrations and points at a larger burden of clinically non-significant Leptospira infections in Southern Vietnam. This also indicates background reactivity for serological testing and thus serological result of a single serum sample must be carefully interpreted.


Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2011

High incidence of peripheral blood plasmacytosis in patients with dengue virus infection

Khoa T. D. Thai; J.A. Wismeijer; C. Zumpolle; M.D. de Jong; M.J. Kersten; P. de Vries

Little is known about polyclonal peripheral blood plasmacytosis in dengue virus (DENV)-infected patients. We initiated this prospective observational study to quantify and describe the kinetics and phenotype of peripheral blood plasma cells (PCs) in these patients. Morphological examination and flow cytometric (FC) analysis for the characterization and immunophenotyping of lymphocyte subsets and PCs were performed in 35 and 31 patients suspected of DENV infection, respectively. Our results show that blood plasmacytosis is a very common haematological finding. Depending on the days of illness at presentation, blood plasmacytosis was observed in 64% to 73% of patients. Blood plasmacytosis was most pronounced before 7 days of illness and declined rapidly thereafter, to completely disappear after 14 days of illness. Blood plasmacytosis was higher in secondary DENV infection. The majority of CD138(+) PCs (89%) had a shared immunophenotype (CD45(+)/CD19(-)/CD56(-)) and in all cases the PCs were polyclonal. Blood plasmacytosis, characterized by a transient presence of polyclonal PCs in the circulation, is a common event in DENV infection.

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Bernard Cazelles

École Normale Supérieure

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Maciej F. Boni

Pennsylvania State University

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