1.Emergence Of Dengue Virus Type 4 During COVID-19 Pandemic In Patients Admitted to a Teaching Hospital In Malaysia (Peningkatan virus denggi serotip keempat semasa pandemik COVID-19 pada pesakit yang dimasukkan ke hospital pengajar di Malaysia)
Mahrunissa Mahadi ; Siti Norlia Othman ; Najma Kori ; Sharifah Azura Salleh ; Zetti Zainol Rashid ; Petrick Periyasamy ; Nor Azila Muhammad Azami ; Noraidatulakma Abdullah ; Hui-min Neoh
Malaysian Journal of Health Sciences 2023;21(No.1):115-125
Prior to COVID-19, dengue was an important public health problem in Malaysia. Due to the movement control order
imposed by the Malaysian government to curb the COVID-19 transmission, a study predicted that mosquito-borne
diseases would increase during lockdown and partial lockdown seasons. Thus, this study aims to determine the current
situation of dengue incidence during the pre-COVID-19 pandemic (2019) and during the COVID-19 pandemic (2020
and 2021). We compared the number of laboratory-confirmed cases in the pre-COVID19 year (2019) and during the
COVID-19 pandemic (2020 and 2021). In addition to that, we characterized the clinical manifestation, dengue serotype
and viremia levels of dengue patients that were admitted to the Hospital Cancelor Tuanku Muhriz. We found a significant
decrease in the number of laboratory-confirmed cases between COVID-19 pandemic and the pre-covid period
(p2020=0.064; p2021<0.001). In this study, we found DENV 4 serotype was the most common serotype in dengue
patients admitted to our hospital. There was no significant correlation between DENV serotype/viremia level with
clinical manifestation of dengue fever and dengue with warning signs. However, patients infected with DENV4 had the
highest viral load compared to patients infected with other serotypes. We also found high viremia levels were significantly
associated with the febrile phase.
2.Discordance between Fasting Plasma Glucose (FPG) and HbA1c in Diagnosing Diabetes and Pre-diabetes in The Malaysian Cohort
Nor Azian Abdul Murad ; Noraidatulakma Abdullah ; Mohd Arman Kamaruddin ; Nazihah Abd Jalal ; Norliza Ismail ; Nurul Ain Mhd Yusof ; Norlaila Mustafa ; Rahman Jamal
Journal of the ASEAN Federation of Endocrine Societies 2021;36(2):127-132
Objective:
In this present study, we aim to evaluate the accuracy of the HbA1c relative to fasting plasma glucose (FPG) in the diagnosis of diabetes and pre-diabetes among The Malaysian Cohort (TMC) participants.
Methodology:
FPG and HbA1c were taken from 40,667 eligible TMC participants that have no previous history of diabetes, aged between 35-70 years and were recruited from 2006 – 2012. Participants were classified as normal, diabetes and pre-diabetes based on the 2006 World Health Organization (WHO) criteria. Statistical analyses were performed using ANOVA and Chi-square test, while Pearson correlation and Cohen’s kappa were used to examine the concordance rate between FPG and HbA1c.
Results:
The study samples consisted of 16,224 men and 24,443 women. The prevalence of diabetes among the participants was 5.7% and 7.5% according to the FPG and HbA1c level, respectively. Based on FPG, 10.6% of the participants had pre-diabetes but this increased to 14.2% based on HbA1c (r=0.86; P<0.001). HbA1c had a sensitivity of 58.20 (95% CI: 56.43, 59.96) and a specificity of 98.59 (95% CI: 98.46, 98.70).
Conclusion
A higher prevalence of pre-diabetes and diabetes was observed when using HbA1c as a diagnosis tool, suggesting that it could possibly be more useful for early detection. However, given that HbA1c may also have lower sensitivity and higher false positive rate, several diagnostic criteria should be used to diagnose diabetes accurately.
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
;
Diagnosis