Health Economics of Dengue: A Systematic Literature Review and Expert Panel's Assessment

Dengue vaccines are currently in development and policymakers need appropriate economic studies to determine their potential financial and public health impact. We searched five databases (PubMed, EMBASE, LILAC, EconLit, and WHOLIS) to identify health economics studies of dengue. Forty-three manuscripts were identified that provided primary data: 32 report economic burden of dengue and nine are comparative economic analyses assessing various interventions. The remaining two were a willingness-to-pay study and a policymaker survey. An expert panel reviewed the existing dengue economic literature and recommended future research to fill information gaps. Although dengue is an important vector-borne disease, the economic literature is relatively sparse and results have often been conflicting because of use of inconsistent assumptions. Health economic research specific to dengue is urgently needed to ensure informed decision making on the various options for controlling and preventing this disease.


INTRODUCTION
Dengue fever is a rapidly increasing public health problem in tropical and subtropical regions with a large percentage of the world's population at risk. 1 Resource-poor countries are particularly hard hit because of inadequate public health infrastructure, lack of resources to combat the vector, and limited health care services to manage cases. 2 The most recent estimates suggested 50 million infections and 20,000 deaths occur each year. 1 Several tetravalent dengue vaccine candidates are in phase 1 and 2 clinical trials and one candidate has entered a large-scale efficacy and safety trial. 3,4 Depending on the results of these and future clinical trials, a dengue vaccine could be licensed in the next 5 years.
The Pediatric Dengue Vaccine Initiative (PDVI) is a product development partnership 5 whose goal it is to accelerate development, evaluation, and introduction of dengue vaccines in endemic countries. 6 To understand the economic impact of the disease and to strategically plan for further research, PDVI conducted a systematic review of the literature and convened a panel of experts to assess the results and provide recommendations on the priorities and methodology for conducting further research, especially disease burden and cost-of-illness studies, comparative analyses, and modeling for planning vaccine introduction strategies.

Expert panel.
In April 2008, the PDVI sponsored a meeting of experts (coauthors) in health economics or dengue in Antwerp, Belgium, to review the existing literature on dengue health economics, identify future research needs, and provide recommendations on priorities and methodology for conducting further research. Future research was prioritized by the panel on the basis of their expert opinion and past experience after considering estimated study costs, surmised interest to decision makers on dengue vaccine development and introduction, and the assumption that an approved dengue vaccine would be available within 5 years. Need-based priority was rated numerically, 1 = urgent, 2 = needed, 3 = optional. The panel then assigned a time period during which the needed studies should be started so the results are available for planning when a dengue vaccine becomes available; 1-2 years, 2-4 years, and 5-6 years. Because the interest in economic studies varies based on the needs of different stakeholders in dengue vaccine, interest in each type of study result was rated from high to low on the basis of the expert opinion of the panel.  ). The search criteria combined the medical subject headings (MeSH) "dengue," "economics," "health economics," "costs and cost analysis," "cost of illness," "quality of life," with the text words "economic," "cost," "best practice analysis," "budget impact," "DALY," and "QALY." Unpublished reports were also included if they were identified in a database (i.e., LILAC, WHOLIS, EconLit) or referenced in a publication identified in the initial search. Abstracts and full text of identified manuscripts were reviewed and the following inclusion criteria were applied: 1) analyzed both costs and clinical outcomes, 2) provided detailed methods, and 3) involved original data analysis. Excluded were reviews, editorials, and studies involving previously published data. The quality of data was assessed (by MEB) according to the scale developed by Sackett and others 7 and recommended by the York Centre 8 but modified for dengue ( Table 1 ). After piloting, the data abstraction instrument was applied to all included studies (MEB). The variables abstracted became the column headings for Tables 2 and 3 . The full text of included studies Table 1 Quality grading scale for economic studies of dengue 7,8 Quality score Description I Evaluation of important alternative interventions comparing all clinically relevant outcomes (e.g., non-hospitalized, hospitalized, or dengue hemorrhagic fever [DHF], and death) against appropriate cost measurement, and including a clinically sensible sensitivity analysis II Evaluation of important alternative interventions comparing a limited number of outcomes against appropriate cost measurement, but including a clinically sensible sensitivity analysis III Evaluation of important alternative interventions comparing all clinically relevant outcomes against inappropriate cost measurement, but including a clinically sensible sensitivity analysis IV Evaluation without a clinically sensible sensitivity analysis V Expert opinion with no explicit critical appraisal, based on economic theory was circulated to all coauthors before convening the expert panel and after the update search was completed. Results and discussion of the studies were synthesized by MEB and circulated for additional comments to all coauthors. Classification scheme. We categorized identified publications according to economic methods (macroeconomic versus microeconomic) and study objectives (e.g., quantify disease burden or assess the impact interventions [comparative analysis]).
Disease burden studies were categorized by the metric used to quantify burden-non-monetized units (e.g., DALY 9 ) or monetized units (e.g., dollars); the latter being classified as a cost-of-illness (COI) study. The COI studies were categorized by level or perspective of the payer (e.g., government, healthcare system, household) and government perspective was further subdivided into public health costs and budget impact of vaccine introduction.
Comparative analyses were categorized by type of intervention (i.e., vaccine versus vector control) and the value used to make the comparisons: 1) cost-effectiveness analyses used unvalued or natural health gains (e.g., cases of dengue, deaths averted, life-years gained); 2) cost-utility analyses valued outcomes in units that reflected measures of morbidity and mortality, such as quality (QALYs) or disability-adjusted life years (DALYs); and 3) cost-benefit analyses converted health outcomes into monetary units to enable comparisons between interventions in the health and other sectors (e.g., education) to estimate return on investment.
A second factor related to variability in reported dengue disease burden has been inconsistent application of disability scores, which are a measure of disease severity and essential to the DALY calculation. Early scores were probably too low, ranging from 0.172 to 0.211 (at that time equivalent to uncomplicated malaria or a radius fracture in a hard cast), whereas the duration of illness of 30 days 29,53,54 was too long. 10,[57][58][59] An early study that used only nationally reported DHF cases used a disability score of 0.22 but shortened the duration of illness to 20 days, 17 which reduced the DALY estimate by 30%.
In 2004, WHO revised the burden estimates for dengue. 55 For DHF, the disability score was increased to 0.5 but the duration of illness was shortened to 11 days, which resulted in the same DALYs obtained in 1990 when the disability score was ~0.2 and duration of illness was 30 days. More importantly, DF was included in the new estimates, with an assigned disability score of 0.211 and illness duration of 5.5 days. In comparison, an uncomplicated febrile episode of malaria, which is often in the differential diagnosis of DF because of the similarity in clinical presentation and severity, was increased from its 1990 disability score of 0.21 to a score of 0.471, more than doubling the DALY estimate. 60 Because patients with DHF require hospitalization and cannot care for themselves, Meltzer and others used a 0.81 disability score 34 (equivalent to a severe migraine 53 or diseases that interfere with one's ability to care for oneself) but used shorter durations of each type of illness 34 to be consistent with clinical data, 47,61 which more than doubled the estimated DALYs ( Table 2 ). Subsequent studies have also used this higher disability score for DHF. 10,22,32 Meltzer and others also documented that non-hospitalized cases, which typically are limited to DF, account for the greater portion of dengue disease burden, 34 a finding confirmed by subsequent studies. 10,12,20,32 However, even in countries or regions where non-hospitalized DF is reported, under-reporting is still significant. 62 Luz and others reported that from 1986 through 2006, deaths accounted for the majority of the remaining disease burden caused by dengue after DF in Brazil, and that this proportion was increasing. 32 Luz and others also reported that dengue disease burden was greatest at the city level followed by state and national levels. 32 Although dengue is primarily a disease of urban centers, 2 its disease burden in rural areas has been increasing. [63][64][65] The duration of disability during dengue was not fully examined in the identified studies. A prospective study by Anderson and others determined the duration of measurable fever in hospitalized and non-hospitalized patients rather than the subjective history of fever. 10 The average duration of fever (2) Duration of illness defined as observed febrile period rather than the subjective report of recovery, which is the standard method.
(3) Cost of transport to and from medical facilities not included. (1) Prospective cohort study design.
( year of an outbreak. (1) Reports primary data collected on cost.
(2) Data gathered from regional, provincial, and community facilities.
( Multiplication factor based on serosurvey data. year of an outbreak. (1) Provides updated cost data from 6 countries and new data from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Malaysia.
(2) Costs estimated were averaged across the sites and reported individually.  (2) Limited to hospitalized patients.
(1) Average household impact based on interview and review of hospital records from 204 retrospectively identified cases.
(2) Accounted for the impacted of multiple cases within in the same house.   (1) First dengue economic study that included Africa.
(3) Costs were monitored prospectively across the sites and reported individually.  66 and visual analog scale (VAS) from the EuroQol EQ-5D. 67 They found quality of life was impaired for 9 days among non-hospitalized patients and 13 days for hospitalized patients. At its lowest value, the VAS score was reduced to about 40% of that of its highest value, with slightly lower values for hospitalized versus ambulatory patients, and for adults versus children. Of eight health domains evaluated, an average of 5.0 were affected among non-hospitalized patients, and 6.2 among hospitalized patients. 31 An advantage of this approach versus DALYs is that the patients were surveyed regarding how they experienced their disease, rather than that experts rated the severity of the disease stage. It was not clear, however, who served as respondent for children (i.e., a parent, a health care provider, or the study investigator). 68 Moreover, although this was the first study to conduct a daily assessment of dengue on the quality of life, DALYS were not calculatedlimiting comparability with previous studies. Although the goal of using DALYs is to compare and prioritize diseases based on a common metric, in the case of dengue significant revision in the scoring has occurred since the original effort was undertaken, because disease burden studies aided by improved diagnostics raised awareness of the true breadth and spectrum of symptomatic dengue. Still, even the most recent estimates by WHO, underestimate dengue disease burden by using disability scores half those that are used by author researchers in the published literature. New disease burden estimates from WHO are expected soon and may be more consistent with contemporary estimates.
With monetization. Government perspective. Thirteen studies reported the cost of illness of dengue from the government perspective ( Table 2 ) 12,16,20,23,30,[35][36][37]41,42,46,49,51 ; eight also included costs from both the healthcare system and household perspective. The majority was conducted in Latin America and over 10 years ago. 20  showed a significant difference in dengue cost of illness between children (0-15 years of age) and adults (> 15 years of age), 37 which is consistent with clinical studies that showed children are less likely than adults to be symptomatic but more likely to have severe disease. 69,70 Okanurak and others also documented a significant difference in cost of illness between a large referral center and provincial or community hospitals, although only three facilities were included in the study. 37 Adam and others suggested that multiple facilities of the same type should be studied to define the degree and magnitude of cost variability. 71 All studies itemized cost, but there was variation in what costs were included. Anderson and others found that transportation to healthcare facilities was a significant contributor to outpatient costs, but this was not included in all studies. 20,23,37,49,51 Most studies included days of lost wages, 23,49 and some included the value of days children were absent from school. 12,23,46,49 The most inclusive COI studies were reported by Armien and others and Suaya and others. The Armien and others study 12 was part of a larger eight country study coordinated by Suaya and others. 46 Although the same COI is reported for Panama in both studies, Armien and others also estimated the cost of surveillance, laboratory testing, and vector control. 12,46 Both studies also included lodging, food, and the cost of transportation to medical facilities for both patients and any accompanying or visiting family member, lost wages and productivity, which was assigned to used and unemployed persons and all family members caring for the patient. 12,46 Additionally, the use of multiplication factors to account for under-reporting of cases to national surveillance systems had a major impact on aggregated cost estimates, whereas the inclusion of private healthcare providers was associated with substantially higher costs per case. 12,26,46,50 In dengue endemic countries, transmission occurs year round with a seasonal peak incidence (dengue season). In addition, cyclical epidemics occur at 3-9 year intervals, but high rates of transmission usually continue during the interepidemic periods. 72 All studies except that by Canyon, 16 report data from epidemic years, and none provided data from non-epidemic years in the same country. Dengue epidemics could result in great variation in government and healthcare expenditures, including actual costs per case. For example, during a typical non-epidemic year in Brazil, 200,000 dengue cases were reported but during the 2002 epidemic this number rose to 800,000. 73 In addition, Siqueira and others 73 showed the proportion of dengue cases that required hospitalization increased during epidemics. 73 While this could be caused by increased disease severity from biologic factors (virus or host), 72 it may be behavioral. Several household studies showed increased parental fear and concern when a child developed a fever during a dengue epidemic. 28,47 In addition, the expert panel suggested that rationing of scarce resources during an epidemic may actually reduce the cost per patient.
Public health costs. Five of the 13 studies reported government costs of dengue prevention and control. 30,35,36,41,42 Lok itemized the costs of vector control in Singapore, including person hours, equipment, and pesticides. 30 The Brazilian Ministry of Health 31 included costs of education, laboratory surveillance, and legislative activities. 35 Two Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) reports provided the annual cost of vector control for 23 countries in their region. 41,42 A study by Nathan evaluated the Aedes aegypti control program in 24 Caribbean and selected neighboring countries; all in the PAHO region. 36 Lok identified a common problem in allocation of costs for vector control programs; rarely were specific staff or equipment solely designated for dengue. 30 As a result, if dengue were controlled through other means (e.g., vaccine), the associated reallocation of resources to other vector control activities would lead to savings in opportunity costs, but not necessarily in financial expenditures. This is particularly true when other diseases (e.g., yellow fever, Chikungunya) are transmitted by the same vector (e.g., Aedes mosquitoes) necessitating continued Aedes control efforts. This is observed for yellow fever and Japanese encephalitis, both vaccine preventable diseases that include vector control programs as an integral part of their prevention and control plans. 74,75 However, a true saving in vector control activities might occur if vaccination eliminated dengue epidemics with their attendant intensified activities and expenditures. 76,77 Budget impact. No reports were identified detailing countryspecific cost estimates for dengue vaccination programs as has been done for other vaccine preventable diseases. 78,79 Such preplanning has been shown to facilitate introduction of a new vaccine. 80 Healthcare system perspective. Four studies reported dengue COI from the perspective of the healthcare system. Harling and others assessed the impact of travel associated disease cared for in the United Kingdom healthcare system, where dengue accounted for 2% of the total cost. 24 The study was limited because costs for hospitalized patients were estimated on a per-day basis without itemization. Wong and others used diagnostic billing codes (i.e., Australian National Diagnosis-Related Group (AN DRG) version 3.1 [1996]) to estimate the direct medical costs for hospitalized dengue patients. 52 Dengue was also the main focus of studies by Añez and others (Venezuela) 11 and Garg and others (India) 21 who used an average cost of hospitalization after summing accumulated costs associated with the study facilities. Añez and others multiplied this estimate by the reported number of cases, 11 whereas Garg and others used a multiplication factor to account for under-reporting. 21 The latter study had several weaknesses including, the use of a multiplication factor and age distributions derived from Thailand instead of India. 21 Because the age distribution and standards of care for dengue treatment often differ by region, 63, 81, 82 their estimates may not be valid. Furthermore, Garg and others used an average duration of illness based on all febrile illnesses rather than dengue, which have been shown to have a significantly longer duration of fever. 10 Household perspective. Dengue household impact studies have documented not only the financial burden of dengue but also intangibles such as emotional stress for an entire household. 25,27,28,47,50 Dengue is among the infectious diseases that can cause unexpected catastrophic medical costs for families living in low-income countries (a catastrophic cost has been defined as ≥ 40% of the capacity to pay, on the basis of a household's non-subsistence effective income. 83 These costs are even greater when multiple cases occur in the same household, which is common during epidemics. 25,47,50 Parents often express fear for their children with regard to dengue, which likely affects health-seeking behavior and increases their willingness to spend and incur debt for perceived higher quality healthcare services. 50 The issue of debt is important because this has been shown to persist for more than a year in households where children have been hospitalized for dengue. 26,32,50,84 Loss of assets and ongoing debt are rarely accounted for in COI studies. Such variations have also been described for other diseases, such as malaria. 85,86 Challenges with these studies include the uneven and seasonal changes in income that can alter impact 85,86 and complexities of estimating the value of bartered goods and services. Comparative analyses. Vaccines. There were two published studies of potential cost-effectiveness of dengue vaccination compared with either vector control or case management ( Table 3 ). 43,44 In 1993 Shepard and Halstead estimated the costeffectiveness of immunization compared with vector control and case management in the context of two levels of healthcare system development-"developed" or "undeveloped" (e.g., Thailand and Laos, respectively). 43 Base-case assumptions included a 3.8% dengue incidence, 1.2 billion people at risk of infection, a two-dose vaccine regimen at US$17.50/dose with a US$0.50 administration cost per dose. 43 Costs of alternative control methods were US$0.46 per capita for chemical vector control and US$2.25 for environmental vector control. Direct medical costs for hospitalized DHF cases were estimated at US$200; non-hospitalized cases were not included. The authors found a dengue vaccine would be cost-effective (average US$1,440 per DALY saved and US$92,461/death averted) in countries with poorly developed healthcare delivery systems, but case management would be more cost-effective in countries classified as "developed." 43 A sensitivity analysis indicated vaccine would become cost-effective in developed countries at ≤ US$7.00/dose.
A subsequent study (including the same authors) in 2004 analyzed 10 Southeast Asian countries with an estimated population of 529 million and dengue incidence based on WHO reporting. 44 Other assumptions included a two-dose regimen costing US$0.50/dose in the public sector and $10/dose in the private sector, US$3.50/dose for vaccine administration, 1% annual disease incidence, treatment costs (direct and indirect) of US$139 for DHF and US$4.29 for DF, and vector control costs of US$0.02-$3.56 per capita. 44 This study found vaccine to be potentially cost-effective (average US$50 per DALY, 52% because of reduction in premature mortality), at US$7.64/dose (weighted average for public and private sector including administration costs). 44 The difference in results of the two studies reflects wide differences of input assumptions, which makes it difficult to compare the results of the studies. The WHO has recently proposed guides that may help standardizing such analyses more. 87,88 Vector control. There have been seven additional comparative studies that focused on vector control for dengue prevention ( Table 3 ). 13,14,33,38,39,45,48 The study by Arthur D. Little, Incorporated reported that eradication of Aedes aegypti was more costeffective than on-going control in Latin America. 13 Although the studies by McConnell and others, Suaya and others, and Orellano and Pedroni also estimated the potential economic impact of control programs on disease incidence, 33,38,45 the studies by Osaka and others, Baly and others, and Tun-Lin and others prospectively compared outcome measures in intervention and control communities interventions. 14,39,48 Osaka and others used disease incidence as the outcome measure, 39 whereas Baly and others and Tun-Lin and others used larval indices. 14,48 Because of its randomized and multicenter, multicountry design, Tun-Lin and others was the most powerful study and effectively showed that targeted larval control was at least as effective as non-targeted control but at a lower cost except where the intervention incorporated social mobilization. 48 However, while the use of larval indices are correlated with the prevalence of human dengue infections, 89 outbreaks still occur at what are considered low larval indices. 90 Stated preferences research. In the one identified WTP study, Palanca-Tan asked 205 persons living in metropolitan Manila to consider a single dose, safe and efficacious dengue vaccine. 40 Their willingness to pay for such a vaccine was elicited by a dichotomous choice approach, 91 with an average that ranged from US$27 to $32. 40 The WTP studies also captured psychological and social aspects of health outcomes that cannot be assessed through traditional cost-of-illness studies (e.g., satisfaction the individual derives from using the resources or the value attached to future use). 88 Perhaps, more important than preferred cost, this type of study can estimate public demand for a vaccine. 19 Dengue can become such an important political issue that government officials may lose favor as a result of choices made during dengue epidemics. [92][93][94][95] Indeed, policymakers in four Southeast Asian countries (Cambodia, Indonesia, Philippines, and Vietnam) expressed a high level of concern regarding DF and a great need for a vaccine. 19 In addition, they indicated that disease surveillance studies, in-country vaccine trials or pilot projects, and studies on the economic burden of dengue and the cost-effectiveness of dengue vaccines were necessary for informed decision making regarding vaccine introduction. 19 Surveys of policymakers may be informative in predicting public support for vaccine introduction and their importance for decision making should not be underestimated. 19 For example, public concern about disease awareness rather than considerations of cost-effectiveness drove recommendations for use of meningococcal vaccine in college students in the United States and other countries. 96,97 DISCUSSION On the basis of the review of available studies, the expert panel recommended types of economic studies they thought would fill information gaps related to development and introduction of dengue vaccines ( Table 4 ). In addition, they assigned priorities and suggested a time frame during which these studies should be completed; primarily influenced by estimated time for first approval of a dengue vaccine. Finally, the panel indicated their perception of importance of these studies to decision-makers involved in development or introduction of a dengue vaccine. Below are specific comments for the recommended studies ( Table 4 ).
Disease burden. Accurate disease incidence data are required to provide robust estimates of disease burden across the regions where dengue is endemic. National dengue surveillance programs are designed to detect disease trends and detect outbreaks and their sensitivity and specificity is often affected by program budgets. For this reason, further studies are required to quantify under detection and underreporting. Dengue incidence studies should be prospective, performed in defined populations that are representative of the community, and include a wide range of ages. Febrile illness should be the starting point to ascertain dengue cases, which should be defined by well-established and validated laboratory methods that include molecular diagnostics for DENV and/or DENV NS1 antigen detection and immunoglobulin M (IgM) anti-DENV. 98 The results from these studies can then be compared with national surveillance data gathered in the same region to provide reasonable multiplication factors to account for underreporting. Alternatively, a more rigorous method for estimating the degree of disease under-reporting is to perform a capturerecapture study. 62 Additional prospective COI studies are needed that include representative sampling from each type of heath care facility in both the public and private sectors, preferably over multiple years. Because DHF and DF are not classified in a uniform way across all dengue endemic regions, 99 the expert panel recommended that cases be categorized by outcomes, such as non-hospitalized, hospitalized, or death. Adjustment is needed for age-specific differences in rates of symptomatic disease in children and adults. Many studies have used age categories of 0-15 years and > 15 years, which was considered the minimum acceptable age stratification by the expert panel.
The panel stressed that future studies should clearly indicate assumptions, include costs, and use dengue-and country-specific data. Itemized lists of costs appropriate for micro-costing of programs have been published, 100 and WHO has developed guides for economic studies. 87,88 Comprehensive multiperspective studies that document the total cost of illness but also allow for analysis from each perspective are useful to decision makers. The exceptions are budget impact studies of vaccination programs conducted from the government perspective, which are used to determine best approaches to vaccine implementation.
Comparative analyses. Additional comparative analyses to estimate the potential economic impact of a dengue vaccine are a high priority. The experts recommended cost-effectiveness or cost-utility analyses to avoid the inherent difficulties of costbenefit analyses associated with converting benefits, including lives saved, into monetary units. These studies should include: 1) clearly defined and referenced assumptions; 2) countryspecific or internationally vetted costs of vaccination and potential vaccine related adverse events, and added costs of post-implementation surveillance to monitor safety and efficacy of a new vaccine; 3) estimated impact on mortality, as policymakers may expect this to be high, despite the fact that dengue is a relatively low mortality disease; 4) reporting of cost-effectiveness in natural units such as hospitalizations averted, deaths averted, life-years gained, and as DALYs averted or QALYs gained; and 5) a discount rate of 3% for both costs and effects as recommended in WHO guides. 88 The meeting participants agreed that recently developed WHO Guides for standardization of economic evaluations of immunization programs and economic consequences of disease should be followed to allow comparability between studies. 87,88 Furthermore, a number of specific issues related to model-based economic evaluation of vaccines as opposed to curative drugs, are relevant but outlined elsewhere. 53,101 Designing cost-effectiveness studies before a vaccine has been fully evaluated requires assumptions about variables such as efficacy and effectiveness, dosage and costs. The panel advised the following: 1) assume first generation tetravalent dengue vaccines would require at least a two-dose regimen, and likely three doses; 2) determine the threshold price for a vaccine to be cost-effective rather than assigning a specific cost, because it is difficult to predict cost (public and private) for a vaccine that has not been marketed; and 3) conduct sensitivity analyses on epidemiological, effectiveness, and cost estimates to determine the uncertainty of the cost-effectiveness estimates.
A static cost-effectiveness model developed for pandemic influenza, 102 has been shown to stimulate interest and further country-specific economic research (Meltzer MI, personal communication) and could have the same effect for dengue. Dynamic transmission models are also needed and should account for serotype-specific immunity, herd protection, vector-host interactions, seasonal variations in disease transmission, and age-specific differences in disease incidence and severity. These models in turn should be coupled with economic models to assist in choosing the most efficient and costeffective options for intervention.
Stated preferences research. The panel recommended that future studies of this type include an assessment of acceptance of a potential vaccine with varying levels of effectiveness and price, and questions that allow comparisons with prevention of other diseases.
Limitations. By its very nature, the systematic literature review in this work captured mainly published studies, and is Table 4 Dengue health economic expert panel opinion of the priority, * timing, † and perceived importance ‡ of additional dengue health economic studies to audiences with interest in a dengue vaccine therefore subject to publication bias. We aimed to minimize potential exclusions of valuable sources by searching the reference lists of retained studies ( Figure 1 ) to identify relevant books, unpublished data, evaluations, and dissertations. Furthermore, we did not restrict the review by language. That said, only English, Spanish, French, and Portuguese were encountered during the search.

CONCLUSION
Although dengue is an important vector-borne disease, the economic literature is relatively sparse and results have often been conflicting because of use of inconsistent assumptions. This review of the literature captures the available information at a point in time. We presume that as new information becomes available it will be added to this information base. Health economic research specific to dengue is urgently needed to ensure informed decision making on the various options for controlling and preventing this disease-an option, which in the not too distant future, is likely to include vaccination.