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. 2012 Mar 27;6(3):e1450. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0001450

Table 1. Prospective Dengue Cohort Studies.

Location Years Ages Follow-Up Population with Follow-Up Notes Reference
Bangkok, Thailand 1962–1964 All ages 6–11 months 1,887 Includes entomological indices and hospitalization data. [63]
Koh Samui, Thailand 1966–1967 2–12 years 1 year 336 [64]
Yangon, Myanmar 1984–1988 2–6 years 1 year 3,579 Five separate cohorts started each year. Includes hospitalization data. [47]
Bangkok, Thailand 1980–1981 4–16 years 6 months 1,757 [65]
Rayong, Thailand 1980–1981 4–14 years 1 year 1,056 [66]
Iquitos, Peru 1993–1996 7–20 years 2.5 years 129 No DHF/DSS found in secondary cases. [67]
Bangkok+Khamphaeng Phet, Thailand 1994–1996 6 months –14 years 1 year 168 48 had follow-up past 180 days. [68], [69]
Yogyakarta, Indonesia 1995–1996 4–9 years 1 year 1,837 [45]
Khamphaeng Phet, Thailand 1998–ongoing 7–11 years 2 years 2,119 Study performed in two periods: 1998–2002, 2004–2006 [70][72]
Bandung, West Java, Indonesia 2000–2002 18–66 years 2 years 2,536 [73]
West Jakarta, Indonesia 2001–2003 Children and adults 14 days; 6 months for cases 785 Cluster investigation enrolling contacts of known cases. [74]
Managua, Nicaragua 2001–2003 4–16 years 1–2 years 999 [75]
An Giang, Vietnam 2004–2007 2–15 years 3 years >3,000 Additional children recruited every year. 1,594 children had 3 years of follow-up. [76]
Managua, Nicaragua 2004–ongoing 2–9 years 4 years 3,721 Includes entomological indices. [77], [78]
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam 2006–2007 Newborns enrolled 1 year 1,244 infants [79]
Ratchaburi, Thailand 2006–2010 3–15 years 4 years ∼3,000 Study ended. Unpublished
Colombo, Sri Lanka 2008–2010 <12 years 2 years 800 Study ended. Unpublished
Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam 2009–ongoing Newborns 1 year ∼3,000 infants Unpublished