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Dive into the research topics where Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro is active.

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Featured researches published by Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro.


The Lancet | 2014

Clinical efficacy and safety of a novel tetravalent dengue vaccine in healthy children in Asia: a phase 3, randomised, observer-masked, placebo-controlled trial

Maria Rosario Capeding; Ngoc Huu Tran; Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro; Hussain Imam Muhammad Ismail; Tawee Chotpitayasunondh; Mary Noreen Chua; Chan Quang Luong; Dewa Nyoman Wirawan; Revathy Nallusamy; Punnee Pitisuttithum; Usa Thisyakorn; In-Kyu Yoon; Diane van der Vliet; Edith Langevin; Thelma Laot; Yanee Hutagalung; Carina Frago; Mark Boaz; T. Anh Wartel; Nadia Tornieporth; Melanie Saville; Alain Bouckenooghe

BACKGROUND An estimated 100 million people have symptomatic dengue infection every year. This is the first report of a phase 3 vaccine efficacy trial of a candidate dengue vaccine. We aimed to assess the efficacy of the CYD dengue vaccine against symptomatic, virologically confirmed dengue in children. METHODS We did an observer-masked, randomised controlled, multicentre, phase 3 trial in five countries in the Asia-Pacific region. Between June 3, and Dec 1, 2011, healthy children aged 2-14 years were randomly assigned (2:1), by computer-generated permuted blocks of six with an interactive voice or web response system, to receive three injections of a recombinant, live, attenuated, tetravalent dengue vaccine (CYD-TDV), or placebo, at months 0, 6, and 12. Randomisation was stratified by age and site. Participants were followed up until month 25. Trial staff responsible for the preparation and administration of injections were unmasked to group allocation, but were not included in the follow-up of the participants; allocation was concealed from the study sponsor, investigators, and parents and guardians. Our primary objective was to assess protective efficacy against symptomatic, virologically confirmed dengue, irrespective of disease severity or serotype, that took place more than 28 days after the third injection. The primary endpoint was for the lower bound of the 95% CI of vaccine efficacy to be greater than 25%. Analysis was by intention to treat and per procotol. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01373281. FINDINGS We randomly assigned 10,275 children to receive either vaccine (n=6851) or placebo (n=3424), of whom 6710 (98%) and 3350 (98%), respectively, were included in the primary analysis. 250 cases of virologically confirmed dengue took place more than 28 days after the third injection (117 [47%] in the vaccine group and 133 [53%] in the control group). The primary endpoint was achieved with 56·5% (95% CI 43·8-66·4) efficacy. We recorded 647 serious adverse events (402 [62%] in the vaccine group and 245 [38%] in the control group). 54 (1%) children in the vaccine group and 33 (1%) of those in the control group had serious adverse events that happened within 28 days of vaccination. Serious adverse events were consistent with medical disorders in this age group and were mainly infections and injuries. INTERPRETATION Our findings show that dengue vaccine is efficacious when given as three injections at months 0, 6, and 12 to children aged 2-14 years in endemic areas in Asia, and has a good safety profile. Vaccination could reduce the incidence of symptomatic infection and hospital admission and has the potential to provide an important public health benefit. FUNDING Sanofi Pasteur.


Paediatrics and International Child Health | 2012

The revised WHO dengue case classification: does the system need to be modified?

Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro

Abstract There has been considerable debate regarding the value of both the 1997 and 2009 World Health Organization (WHO) dengue case classification criteria for its diagnosis and management. Differentiation between classic dengue fever (DF) and dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF) or severe dengue is a key aspect of dengue case classification. The geographic expansion of dengue and its increased incidence in older age groups have contributed to the limited applicability of the 1997 case definitions. Clinical experience of dengue suggests that the illness presents as a spectrum of disease instead of distinct phases. However, despite the rigid grouping of dengue into DF, DHF and dengue shock syndrome (DSS), overlap between the different manifestations has often been observed, which has affected clinical management and triage of patients. The findings of the DENCO study evaluating the 1997 case definitions formed the basis of the revised 2009 WHO case definitions, which classified the illness into dengue with and without warning signs and severe dengue. Although the revised scheme is more sensitive to the diagnosis of severe dengue, and beneficial to triage and case management, there remain issues with its applicability. It is considered by many to be too broad, requiring more specific definition of warning signs. Quantitative research into the predictive value of these warning signs on patient outcomes and the cost-effectiveness of the new classification system is required to ascertain whether the new classification system requires further modification, or whether elements of both classification systems can be combined.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2013

Dengue and other common causes of acute febrile illness in Asia: an active surveillance study in children.

Maria Rosario Capeding; Mary Noreen Chua; Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro; Ismail I. H. M. Hussain; Revathy Nallusamy; Punnee Pitisuttithum; Usa Thisyakorn; Stephen J. Thomas; Ngoc Huu Tran; Dewa Nyoman Wirawan; In-Kyu Yoon; Alain Bouckenooghe; Yanee Hutagalung; Thelma Laot; Tram Anh Wartel

Background Common causes of acute febrile illness in tropical countries have similar symptoms, which often mimic those of dengue. Accurate clinical diagnosis can be difficult without laboratory confirmation and disease burden is generally under-reported. Accurate, population-based, laboratory-confirmed incidence data on dengue and other causes of acute fever in dengue-endemic Asian countries are needed. Methods and principal findings This prospective, multicenter, active fever surveillance, cohort study was conducted in selected centers in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam to determine the incidence density of acute febrile episodes (≥38°C for ≥2 days) in 1,500 healthy children aged 2–14 years, followed for a mean 237 days. Causes of fever were assessed by testing acute and convalescent sera from febrile participants for dengue, chikungunya, hepatitis A, influenza A, leptospirosis, rickettsia, and Salmonella Typhi. Overall, 289 participants had acute fever, an incidence density of 33.6 per 100 person-years (95% CI: 30.0; 37.8); 57% were IgM-positive for at least one of these diseases. The most common causes of fever by IgM ELISA were chikungunya (in 35.0% of in febrile participants) and S. Typhi (in 29.4%). The overall incidence density of dengue per 100 person-years was 3.4 by nonstructural protein 1 (NS1) antigen positivity (95% CI: 2.4; 4.8) and 7.3 (95% CI: 5.7; 9.2) by serology. Dengue was diagnosed in 11.4% (95% CI: 8.0; 15.7) and 23.9% (95% CI: 19.1; 29.2) of febrile participants by NS1 positivity and serology, respectively. Of the febrile episodes not clinically diagnosed as dengue, 5.3% were dengue-positive by NS1 antigen testing and 16.0% were dengue-positive by serology. Conclusions During the study period, the most common identified causes of pediatric acute febrile illness among the seven tested for were chikungunya, S. Typhi and dengue. Not all dengue cases were clinically diagnosed; laboratory confirmation is essential to refine disease burden estimates.


Vaccine | 2011

Preparing for introduction of a dengue vaccine: Recommendations from the 1st Dengue v2V Asia-Pacific Meeting

Sai Kit Lam; Donald S. Burke; Maria Rosario Capeding; Chee Keong Chong; Laurent Coudeville; Jeremy Farrar; Duane J. Gubler; Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro; Jeffrey N. Hanna; Jean Lang; Han Lim Lee; Yee Sin Leo; Chan Quang Luong; Richard T. Mahoney; John McBride; Jorge Méndez-Galván; Lee Ching Ng; Suchitra Nimmannitya; Eng Eong Ooi; Donald S. Shepard; Jaco Smit; Rémy Teyssou; Laurent Thomas; Joseph Torresi; Pedro Fernando da Costa Vasconcelos; Dewa Nyoman Wirawan; Sutee Yoksan

Infection with dengue virus is a major public health problem in the Asia-Pacific region and throughout tropical and sub-tropical regions of the world. Vaccination represents a major opportunity to control dengue and several candidate vaccines are in development. Experts in dengue and in vaccine introduction gathered for a two day meeting during which they examined the challenges inherent to the introduction of a dengue vaccine into the national immunisation programmes of countries of the Asia-Pacific. The aim was to develop a series of recommendations to reduce the delay between vaccine licensure and vaccine introduction. Major recommendations arising from the meeting included: ascertaining and publicising the full burden and cost of dengue; changing the perception of dengue in non-endemic countries to help generate global support for dengue vaccination; ensuring high quality active surveillance systems and diagnostics; and identifying sustainable sources of funding, both to support vaccine introduction and to maintain the vaccination programme. The attendees at the meeting were in agreement that with the introduction of an effective vaccine, dengue is a disease that could be controlled, and that in order to ensure a vaccine is introduced as rapidly as possible, there is a need to start preparing now.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2017

Dengue seroprevalence and force of primary infection in a representative population of urban dwelling Indonesian children

Ari Prayitno; Anne-Frieda Taurel; Joshua Nealon; Hindra Irawan Satari; Mulya Rahma Karyanti; Rini Sekartini; Soedjatmiko Soedjatmiko; Hartono Gunardi; Bernie Endyarni Medise; R. Tedjo Sasmono; James Mark Simmerman; Alain Bouckenooghe; Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro

Background Indonesia reports the second highest dengue disease burden in the world; these data are from passive surveillance reports and are likely to be significant underestimates. Age-stratified seroprevalence data are relatively unbiased indicators of past exposure and allow understanding of transmission dynamics. Methodology/Principal Findings To better understand dengue infection history and associated risk factors in Indonesia, a representative population-based cross-sectional dengue seroprevalence study was conducted in 1–18-year-old urban children. From October to November 2014, 3,210 children were enrolled from 30 geographically dispersed clusters. Serum samples were tested for anti-dengue IgG antibodies by indirect ELISA. A questionnaire investigated associations between dengue serologic status and household socio-demographic and behavioural factors. Overall, 3,194 samples were tested, giving an adjusted national seroprevalence in this urban population of 69.4% [95% CI: 64.4–74.3] (33.8% [95% CI: 26.4–41.2] in the 1–4-year-olds, 65.4% [95% CI: 69.1–71.7] in the 5–9-year-olds, 83.1% [95% CI: 77.1–89.0] in the 10–14-year-olds, and 89.0% [95% CI: 83.9–94.1] in the 15–18-year–olds). The median age of seroconversion estimated through a linear model was 4.8 years. Using a catalytic model and considering a constant force of infection we estimated 13.1% of children experience a primary infection per year. Through a hierarchical logistic multivariate model, the subject’s age group (1–4 vs 5–9 OR = 4.25; 1–4 vs. 10–14 OR = 12.60; and 1–4 vs 15–18 OR = 21.87; p<0.0001) and the number of cases diagnosed in the household since the subject was born (p = 0.0004) remained associated with dengue serological status. Conclusions/Significance This is the first dengue seroprevalence study in Indonesia that is targeting a representative sample of the urban paediatric population. This study revealed that more than 80% of children aged 10 years or over have experienced dengue infection at least once. Prospective incidence studies would likely reveal dengue burdens far in excess of reported incidence rates.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2016

Symptomatic Dengue Disease in Five Southeast Asian Countries: Epidemiological Evidence from a Dengue Vaccine Trial.

Joshua Nealon; Anne-Frieda Taurel; Maria Rosario Capeding; Ngoc Huu Tran; Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro; Tawee Chotpitayasunondh; Chee Kheong Chong; T. Anh Wartel; Sophie Beucher; Carina Frago; Annick Moureau; Mark Simmerman; Thelma Laot; Maïna L’Azou; Alain Bouckenooghe

Dengue incidence has increased globally, but empirical burden estimates are scarce. Prospective methods are best-able to capture all severities of disease. CYD14 was an observer-blinded dengue vaccine study conducted in children 2–14 years of age in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam. The control group received no vaccine and resembled a prospective, observational study. We calculated the rates of dengue according to different laboratory or clinical criteria to make inferences about dengue burden, and compared with rates reported in the passive surveillance systems to calculate expansion factors which describe under-reporting. Over 6,933 person-years of observation in the control group there were 319 virologically confirmed dengue cases, a crude attack rate of 4.6%/year. Of these, 92 cases (28.8%) were clinically diagnosed as dengue fever or dengue hemorrhagic fever by investigators and 227 were not, indicating that most symptomatic disease fails to satisfy existing case definitions. When examining different case definitions, there was an inverse relationship between clinical severity and observed incidence rates. CYD14’s active surveillance system captured a greater proportion of symptomatic dengue than national passive surveillance systems, giving rise to expansion factors ranging from 0.5 to 31.7. This analysis showed substantial, unpredictable and variable under-reporting of symptomatic dengue, even within a controlled clinical trial environment, and emphasizes that burden estimates are highly sensitive to case definitions. These data will assist in generating disease burden estimates and have important policy implications when considering the introduction and health economics of dengue prevention and control interventions.


Expert Review of Vaccines | 2014

Preparing for dengue vaccine introduction in ASEAN countries: recommendations from the first ADVA regional workshop.

Usa Thisyakorn; Maria Rosario Capeding; Daniel Yam; Thiam Goh; Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro; Zulkifli Ismail; Sutee Yoksan; Tikki Pang

The independent, scientific and educational The Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) Member States Dengue Vaccination Advocacy Steering Committee (ADVASC) was established in 2011 to address the practical challenges faced by ASEAN countries as they prepare for the eventual introduction of a dengue vaccine. ADVASC convened a workshop in September 2012 that drew together public health representatives and dengue experts from seven ASEAN countries in order to make practical recommendations to improve current surveillance and diagnostics for dengue to enable countries to assess consistently, and accurately communicate, the impact of a dengue vaccine. The workshop compared surveillance and diagnostic capacity in these ASEAN countries and made recommendations to streamline and harmonize key elements of these systems. In particular, attendees recommended the need for reconciliation and harmonization of the different World Health Organization guidelines, in use in ASEAN countries for case definition and surveillance of dengue.


Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015

The role of apolipoprotein E polymorphism in improving dyslipidemia in obese adolescents following physical exercise and National Cholesterol Education Program Step II intervention.

Lanny C. Gultom; Damayanti Rusli Sjarif; Herawati Sudoyo; Muchtaruddin Mansyur; Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro; Suzanna Immanuel; Mexitalia Setiawati

Abstract Background: Lifestyle changes are important factors for managing dyslipidemia before considering blood lipid-lowering drugs. However, genetic factors can influence the response outcome. Objective: We aimed to determine a dyslipidemia management strategy in obese adolescents. Patients and methods: A total of 60 dyslipidemic obese adolescents received physical exercise and the NCEP step II diet for 28 days. Apolipoprotein E (apo E) genotypes and blood lipid levels were compared before and after interventions. Results: The apo E3/E3 genotype was found to be common in all subjects. Mean levels of total cholesterol, triglyceride, and low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C) improved in subjects with the E3 allele after the intervention, but not the E2 allele. Total cholesterol and LDL-C, but not triglyceride levels, improved in subjects with the E4 allele. Discussion: Apo E alleles might influence improvement in lipid profiles after diet and exercise interventions. These results could inform personalized dyslipidemia management in obese adolescents, to determine which subjects would benefit from blood lipid-lowering drugs.


Scientific Programming | 2016

Terapi Asiklovir pada Anak dengan Varisela Tanpa Penyulit

Theresia Theresia; Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro

Varisela atau chickenpox atau yang dikenal dengan cacar air adalah infeksi primer virus zoster varicella (VZV) yang umumnya menyerang anak dan merupakan penyakit yang sangat menular. Varisela pada anak tanpa penyulit adalah ringan dan dapat sembuh sendiri. Pengobatan varisela bersifat simtomatik, namun dalam praktek sehari-hari, masih banyak dokter yang memberikan asiklovir oral. Asiklovir sebagai terapi varisela sudah lama digunakan termasuk pada anak sehat tanpa penyulit walaupun sampai saat ini masih kontroversial. Berdasarkan hasil penelusuran didapatkan 8 artikel yang relevan yang dapat disimpulkan bahwa bila asiklovir diberikan dalam 24 jam pertama timbulnya ruam, secara signifikan dapat mengurangi hari lamanya demam, memperpendek lama sakit, mengurangi jumlah lesi, tapi tidak mengurangi komplikasi varisela (level of evidence 1a). Namun asiklovir tidak dianjurkan diberikan secara rutin pada anak varisela tanpa penyulit, karena ada pendapat bahwa kemungkinan terjadinya resistensi terhadap asiklovir dan menganggu imunitas serta masalah biaya yang mahal.


Vaccine | 2018

Immunogenicity and safety of a Trivalent Influenza HA vaccine in Indonesian infants and children

Soedjatmiko Soedjatmiko; Bernie Endyarni Medise; Hartono Gunardi; Rini Sekartini; Hindra Irawan Satari; Sri Rezeki Hadinegoro; Novilia Sjafri Bachtiar; Rini Mulia Sari

INTRODUCTION High rate of influenza infection in children made influenza vaccination strongly recommended for all person aged >6 months in Indonesia. Bio Farma Trivalent Influenza HA (Flubio®) vaccine has been used in adolescents and adults, resulted in increased seroconversion, seroprotection rates and geometric mean titer (GMT). However, no data is available regarding its efficacy and safety in children. This study aimed to assess the immunogenicity and safety of Flubio® vaccine in infants and children. MATERIALS AND METHODS This was a phase II, open-labeled, clinical trial conducted on healthy children aged 6 month-11 years, vaccinated with 1 or 2 doses of Influenza HA vaccine, with a 28-day interval. Flubio® vaccine composed of A/California/7/2009 (H1N1) pandemic 09, A/Texas/50/2012 (H3N2), and B/Massachusetts/2/2012 strain. This study was held at East Jakarta, Indonesia from May until July 2014. A Total of 405 subjects were included and divided into three groups: A(6-35 months), B(3-8 years), and C(9-11 years). Antibody titer was measured at visit V1 (Day 0), V2 (28 days/+7days after the first dose) and V3 (28 days/+7days after second dose). The seroprotection and seroconversion rates were assessed. Safety was assessed up to 28 days following each dose. RESULTS A total of 404 subjects completed the study. After vaccination, all subjects achieved seroprotection and increased seroconversion rates, with post-vaccination antibody titer of ≥1:40 HI for all strains. The GMT also increased significantly. Within 30 min after vaccination, 14.6% and 2% had local and systemic reactions; meanwhile, between 30 min to 72 h after vaccination, 35.1% and 13.6% subjects had local and systemic reactions, respectively. Most reactions were mild. No serious adverse event (SAE) was reported related to vaccine. CONCLUSION Flubio® (Influenza HA Trivalent) vaccine is immunogenic and safe for children aged 6 months-11 years. TRIAL REGISTRATION The trial is registered at the US National Institutes of Health (ClinicalTrials.gov) #NCT02093260.

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Maria Rosario Capeding

Research Institute for Tropical Medicine

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