Dengue virus infections

2025 Case Definition

CSTE Position Statement Number: 25-ID-04

Clinical Criteria

*The vast majority of dengue cases are characterized by fever or chills. If fever or chills are not present, careful consideration of patient’s clinical course, exposure history, and environmental risk are recommended.

**If bleeding is severe (see below), consider severe dengue.

Laboratory Criteria

Confirmatory Laboratory Evidence:

Confirmatory Laboratory Evidence:

***Note: The categorical labels used here to stratify laboratory evidence are intended to support the standardization of case classifications for public health surveillance. The categorical labels should not be used to interpret the utility or validity of any laboratory test methodology.

Epidemiologic Linkage Criteria

1Dengue virus IgG and neutralizing antibodies can persist for many years following a symptomatic or asymptomatic infection. A high proportion of people living in dengue-endemic areas have experienced a previous dengue infection; the presence of neutralizing antibodies alone is only evidence of previous infection. In a single sample, PRNTs can help rule out other flaviviruses but cannot differentiate between recent and remote (unrelated to the current illness) infection from DENV among people with previous exposure.

2In the setting of an outbreak or known transmission of another flavivirus (e.g., Zika or WNV), obtaining negative IgM results for the other flaviviruses is recommended. If IgM antibodies from other flaviviruses are detected and neutralizing antibodies are unable to differentiate flaviviruses, consider reporting the case as ‘Flavivirus disease, not otherwise specified.’

3During a second flavivirus infection, cross-reactive antibodies from the first infecting dengue virus serotype or flavivirus (the “original antigen”) can predominate over the current infecting flavivirus. Neutralizing antibody results should be interpreted with caution when previous dengue infection is suspected or when titers are high against multiple dengue virus serotypes or flaviviruses.

4Visit https://www.cdc.gov/dengue/areas-with-risk/index.html for geographic areas with known current or previous risk of DENV; for areas where cases have not been previously identified, consult with CDC for assistance on risk determination.

Case Classification

Dengue

Confirmed

Probable

Suspected

Severe dengue

Confirmed

Probable

Suspected

Criteria to Distinguish a New Case of Dengue or Severe Dengue from Reports or Notifications which Should Not be Enumerated as a New Case for Surveillance

DENV infection results in long-lasting immunity to symptomatic dengue infection with that DENV-type. However, cross-protective (heterotypic) immunity against DENV infection is short-lived, with estimated durations of 1–3 years [14-15]. In DENV endemic areas where infection pressure is high, individuals have been shown to infrequently have sequential episodes of dengue with two different infecting serotypes. Additionally, detectable IgM anti-DENV can persist for approximately 90 days.

Note: To see the Classification Table: Criteria for
defining a case of dengue, go to the following link
below and go to pages 14 and 15.

CSTE Position Statement: Dengue

See also:

Date Posted: