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Publication


Featured researches published by Tun Linn Thein.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2011

Confirmed adult dengue deaths in Singapore: 5-year multi-center retrospective study

Yee-Sin Leo; Tun Linn Thein; Dale Fisher; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Helen M. L. Oh; Rajmohan L Narayanan; Victor C. Gan; Vernon J. Lee; David C. Lye

BackgroundDengue re-emerges in Singapore despite decades of effective vector control; the infection predominantly afflicts adults. Severe dengue not fulfilling dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) criteria according to World Health Organization (WHO) 1997 guideline was increasingly reported. A new WHO 2009 guideline emphasized warning signs and a wider range of severe dengue manifestations. We aim to evaluate the utility of these two guidelines in confirmed adult dengue fatalities.MethodsWe conducted a multi-center retrospective chart review of all confirmed adult dengue deaths in Singapore from 1 January 2004 to 31 December 2008.ResultsOf 28 adult dengue deaths, median age was 59 years. Male gender comprised 67.9% and co-morbidities existed in 75%. From illness onset, patients presented for admission at a median of 4 days and death occurred at a median of 12 days. Intensive care admission was required in 71.4%. Probable dengue was diagnosed in 32.1% by WHO 1997 criteria and 78.6% by WHO 2009. The earliest warning sign was persistent vomiting at a median of 1.5 days. Hematocrit change ≥20% concurrent with platelet count <20 × 10^9/L was associated with the shortest interval to death at a median of 3 days. Only 35.7% of death cases fulfilled DHF criteria by WHO 1997 versus severe dengue in 100.0% by WHO 2009 criteria. Deaths were due to shock and organ failure. Acute renal impairment occurred in 71.4%, impaired consciousness 57.1% and severe hepatitis 53.6%.ConclusionsIn our adult fatal dengue cohort, WHO 2009 criteria had higher sensitivity in diagnosing probable dengue and severe dengue compared with WHO 1997. As warning signs, persistent vomiting occurred early and hematocrit change ≥20% concurrent with platelet count <20 × 10^9/L preceded death most closely.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2011

Economic Impact of Dengue Illness and the Cost-Effectiveness of Future Vaccination Programs in Singapore

Luis R. Carrasco; Linda K. Lee; Vernon J. Lee; Eng Eong Ooi; Donald S. Shepard; Tun Linn Thein; Victor C. Gan; Alex R. Cook; David C. Lye; Lee Ching Ng; Yee Sin Leo

Background Dengue illness causes 50–100 million infections worldwide and threatens 2.5 billion people in the tropical and subtropical regions. Little is known about the disease burden and economic impact of dengue in higher resourced countries or the cost-effectiveness of potential dengue vaccines in such settings. Methods and Findings We estimate the direct and indirect costs of dengue from hospitalized and ambulatory cases in Singapore. We consider inter alia the impacts of dengue on the economy using the human-capital and the friction cost methods. Disease burden was estimated using disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and the cost-effectiveness of a potential vaccine program was evaluated. The average economic impact of dengue illness in Singapore from 2000 to 2009 in constant 2010 US


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2014

Predictive tools for severe dengue conforming to World Health Organization 2009 criteria.

Luis R. Carrasco; Yee Sin Leo; Alex R. Cook; Vernon J. Lee; Tun Linn Thein; Chi Jong Go; David C. Lye

ranged between


PLOS ONE | 2013

Implications of Discordance in World Health Organization 1997 and 2009 Dengue Classifications in Adult Dengue

Victor C. Gan; David C. Lye; Tun Linn Thein; Frederico Dimatatac; A. Tan; Yee Sin Leo

0.85 billion and


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2011

Validation of Probability Equation and Decision Tree in Predicting Subsequent Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever in Adult Dengue Inpatients in Singapore

Tun Linn Thein; Yee-Sin Leo; Vernon J. Lee; Yan Sun; David C. Lye

1.15 billion, of which control costs constitute 42%–59%. Using empirically derived disability weights, we estimated an annual average disease burden of 9–14 DALYs per 100 000 habitants, making it comparable to diseases such as hepatitis B or syphilis. The proportion of symptomatic dengue cases detected by the national surveillance system was estimated to be low, and to decrease with age. Under population projections by the United Nations, the price per dose threshold for which vaccines stop being more cost-effective than the current vector control program ranged from


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2016

Serum Metabolomics Reveals Serotonin as a Predictor of Severe Dengue in the Early Phase of Dengue Fever.

Liang Cui; Yie Hou Lee; Tun Linn Thein; Jinling Fang; Junxiong Pang; Eng Eong Ooi; Yee Sin Leo; Choon Nam Ong; Steven R. Tannenbaum

50 for mass vaccination requiring 3 doses and only conferring 10 years of immunity to


Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2013

Safety and cost savings of reducing adult dengue hospitalization in a tertiary care hospital in Singapore

Linda K. Lee; Arul Earnest; Luis R. Carrasco; Tun Linn Thein; Victor C. Gan; Vernon J. Lee; David C. Lye; Yee-Sin Leo

300 for vaccination requiring 2 doses and conferring lifetime immunity. The thresholds for these vaccine programs to not be cost-effective for Singapore were


Frontiers in Immunology | 2014

Dengue serotype cross-reactive, anti-E protein antibodies confound specific immune memory for 1 year after infection

Ying Xiu Toh; Victor C. Gan; Thavamalar Balakrishnan; Roland Zuest; Michael Poidinger; Solomonraj Wilson; Ramapraba Appanna; Tun Linn Thein; Adrian Ong; Lee Ching Ng; Yee Sin Leo; Katja Fink

100 and


Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics | 2016

Low antibody titers 5 years after vaccination with the CYD-TDV dengue vaccine in both pre-immune and naïve vaccinees

Sumathy Velumani; Ying Xiu Toh; Shobana Balasingam; Sophia Archuleta; Yee Sin Leo; Victor C. Gan; Tun Linn Thein; Annelies Wilder-Smith; Katja Fink

500 per dose respectively. Conclusions Dengue illness presents a serious economic and disease burden in Singapore. Dengue vaccines are expected to be cost-effective if reasonably low prices are adopted and will help to reduce the economic and disease burden of dengue in Singapore substantially.


Journal of Clinical Virology | 2013

Clinico-genetic characterisation of an encephalitic Dengue virus 4 associated with multi-organ involvement

Hapuarachchige Chanditha Hapuarachchi; Helen M. L. Oh; Tun Linn Thein; Kwoon-Yong Pok; Yee-Ling Lai; Li-Kiang Tan; Kim-Sung Lee; Yee-Sin Leo; Lee Ching Ng

Background Dengue causes 50 million infections per year, posing a large disease and economic burden in tropical and subtropical regions. Only a proportion of dengue cases require hospitalization, and predictive tools to triage dengue patients at greater risk of complications may optimize usage of limited healthcare resources. For severe dengue (SD), proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO) 2009 dengue guidelines, predictive tools are lacking. Methods We undertook a retrospective study of adult dengue patients in Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore, from 2006 to 2008. Demographic, clinical and laboratory variables at presentation from dengue polymerase chain reaction-positive and serology-positive patients were used to predict the development of SD after hospitalization using generalized linear models (GLMs). Principal findings Predictive tools compatible with well-resourced and resource-limited settings – not requiring laboratory measurements – performed acceptably with optimism-corrected specificities of 29% and 27% respectively for 90% sensitivity. Higher risk of severe dengue (SD) was associated with female gender, lower than normal hematocrit level, abdominal distension, vomiting and fever on admission. Lower risk of SD was associated with more years of age (in a cohort with an interquartile range of 27–47 years of age), leucopenia and fever duration on admission. Among the warning signs proposed by WHO 2009, we found support for abdominal pain or tenderness and vomiting as predictors of combined forms of SD. Conclusions The application of these predictive tools in the clinical setting may reduce unnecessary admissions by 19% allowing the allocation of scarce public health resources to patients according to the severity of outcomes.

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Yee Sin Leo

National University of Singapore

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Vernon J. Lee

National University of Singapore

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Yee-Sin Leo

Tan Tock Seng Hospital

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Junxiong Pang

National University of Singapore

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Eng Eong Ooi

National University of Singapore

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Lee Ching Ng

National Environment Agency

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Luis R. Carrasco

National University of Singapore

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