| Literature DB >> 25388365 |
Jennifer D Stowell, Karen Mask, Minal Amin, Rebekah Clark, Denise Levis, Will Hendley, Tatiana M Lanzieri, Sheila C Dollard, Michael J Cannon.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the leading infectious cause of birth defects in the United States. To better understand factors that may influence CMV transmission risk, we compared viral and immunological factors in healthy children and their mothers.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25388365 PMCID: PMC4236433 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-014-0568-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Characteristics of children and mothers
| Variable | Result | Comparable U.S. averages |
|---|---|---|
| Sex of child | (US population <5yrs in 2010) [ | |
| Female | 45% (72/161) | 48.9% |
| Male | 55% (89/161) | 51.1% |
| Age of children | ||
| 0-12 months | 37% (60/161) | NA |
| 13-24 months | 35% (57/161) | NA |
| 25-47 months | 27% (44/161) | NA |
| Maternal age | Median =34 years (range =21-46) | NA |
| Race* | [ | |
| Non-Hispanic White | 69% (111/160) | 79.6% |
| Asian/Asian American | 18% (29/160) | 4.6% |
| Black/African American | 8% (13/160) | 12.9% |
| Other | 4% (7/160) | 2.9% |
| Ethnicity | [ | |
| Hispanic | 4% (7/161) | 15.8% |
| Not Hispanic | 96% (154/161) | 84.2% |
| Maternal educational attainment | [ | |
| Professional degree | 18% (29/161) | 10.2% |
| Master's degree | 22% (36/161) | |
| Bachelor's degree | 35% (57/161) | 19.4% |
| Some college | 20% (32/161) | 27.3% (includes associate degrees) |
| High school/GED | 1% (2/161) | 30.7% |
| Less than high school | 3% (5/161) | 12.4% |
| Median household income | $75,000-$100,000 | $49,777 [ |
| Insurance coverage | [ | |
| Employer | 76% (123/161) | 55.8% |
| Self-insured | 6% (10/161) | 8.2% |
| Public | 4% (6/161) | 15.7% (Medicaid stats only) |
| Don't know/not covered | 14% (22/161) | 16.7% (uninsured) |
| Child ever attended day care | 39% (63/161) | 32.9% (non-relative care) [ |
| CMV seropositive- children | 31% (50/161) | 37.5% [ |
| CMV seropositive - mothers | 91% (29/32) | 56.7% [ |
*Data missing for one child.
Figure 1Number, antibody status, and CMV shedding status of children enrolled in the study. Red outlines represent children with CMV IgG antibody and blue outlines represent children without CMV IgG antibody. Yellow shading represents children shedding CMV in urine only, blue shading represents children shedding in saliva only, and green shading represents children shedding in both urine and saliva. CMV testing was also done in a subset of mothers of children who were CMV antibody positive.
Figure 2Prevalences of CMV IgG antibody and CMV shedding in saliva among children as a function of age in months. Prevalences of CMV IgG antibody and CMV shedding in saliva are also shown for the mothers who were screened. Red shading represents antibody results and blue shading represents saliva results. Panel A shows data from children ages 0-3 months; Panel B shows data from children ages 4-47 months; Panel C shows data from mothers. Antibody prevalences of mothers and children are not directly comparable because the children came from an unselected population whereas the mothers were selected for testing only if their children were CMV-seropositive, and therefore the seroprevalence among mothers was higher than would be expected in a general population.
Figure 3CMV viral loads per mL as a function of Children's ages in months. Panel A shows results for saliva viral loads and panel B shows results for urine viral loads. Circles are only plotted for children who were shedding; negative results (i.e., viral loads below the limit of detection) are not plotted. Yellow circles represent children shedding CMV in urine only, blue circles represent children shedding in saliva only, and green circles represent children shedding in both urine and saliva. The regression line in Panel A is log10 (CMV viral load) =7.1 - 0.108 (age in months), with r2 = 0.46 and P < 0.001; the regression line in Panel B is log10 (CMV viral load) =5.2 - 0.014 (age in months), with r2 = 0.14 and P = 0.22.
Figure 4CMV viral loads per mL stratified by three different variables. Panel A shows viral loads stratified by specimen type (saliva vs. urine) and source (child vs. mother). Panel B shows viral loads for children only stratified by whether the child had high or intermediate versus low CMV IgG antibody avidity. Panel C shows viral loads stratified by day care attendance. Circles are only plotted for children who were shedding; negative results (i.e., viral loads below the limit of detection) are not plotted. Blue circles represent saliva results and yellow circles represent urine results.
Associations between select demographic, viral, and immunological variables
| Variable | CMV shedding in saliva and/or urine | P-value | Saliva viral load | P-valuea | Urine viral load | P-valueb | IgG antibody | P-value | Low IgG avidity | P-value | IgG titers-1(GMT)c | P-value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Median | Mean | Median | |||||||||||
| Group | ||||||||||||||
| Children | 17% (28/161) | 1.6 × 107 | 1.6 × 105 | 1.1 × 105 | 9.6 × 104 | 0.37d | 31% (50/161) | 18% (7/40) | 224 | |||||
| Mothers | 19% (6/32) | 0.83 | 6.1 × 103 | 4.9 × 103 |
| - | - |
| 91% (29/32) | f | 10% (3/29) | 0.50 | 464 |
|
| CMV IgG avidity (all) | ||||||||||||||
| Low | 60% (6/10) | 1.6 × 106 | 2.5 × 106 | - | - | - | - | 136 | ||||||
| High or intermediate | 39% (23/59) | 0.30 | 4.4 × 104 | 1.2 × 104 |
| - | - | NA | - | NA | - | NA | 353 |
|
| CMV shedders (children only) | ||||||||||||||
| No | - | - | - | - | - | 19% (25/133) | 12% (2/17) | 321 | ||||||
| Yes | - | NA | - | - | NA | - | - | NA | 89% (25/28) |
| 23% (5/23) | 0.68 | 290 | 0.68 |
| Day care attendance (children only) | ||||||||||||||
| Never | 9% (9/98) | 5.9 × 106 | 3.7 × 105 | 1.4 × 105 | 1.1 × 105 | 27% (26/98) | 21% (4/19) | 192 | ||||||
| Ever | 30% (19/64) |
| 2.1 × 107 | 1.6 × 105 | 0.63 | 8.9 × 104 | 6.5 × 104 | 0.38 | 38% (24/63) | 0.06 | 14% (3/21) | 0.69 | 258 | 0.35 |
aWilcoxon Rank-Sum test comparing log10 viral loads in saliva.
bWilcoxon Rank-Sum test comparing log10 viral loads in urine.
cWilcoxon Rank-Sum test comparing geometric mean titers (GMT).
dComparison is between Children's saliva and urine.
eComparison is between Children's urine and mothers' saliva.
fAntibody prevalences between mothers and children were not directly comparable because the children came from an unselected population whereas the mothers were selected for testing only if their children were CMV-seropositive, and therefore the seroprevalence among mothers was higher than would be expected in a general population.
Dashes are inserted where a comparison does not make sense or is redundant, or where data were insufficient.
P-values comparing proportions are chi-squared or Fisher’s exact test as appropriate; p-values less than 0.05 are highlighted in bold font.
NA, not applicable.
Figure 5CMV IgG antibody titers among children and mothers. Panel A shows antibody titers as a function of age in months, including a regression line plotted to show the linear relationship between age in months and loge viral loads. Panel B shows antibody titers among mothers, who had a median age of 34 years. Overall geometric mean antibody titers for children and for mothers are shown near the bottom of each panel. Circles are only plotted for individuals who had CMV IgG antibodies; negative results (i.e., antibody titers of zero) are not plotted. Black circles represent mothers' results and white circles represent Children's results.
Figure 6CMV IgG antibody titers as a function of CMV shedding status and CMV IgG antibody avidity status. Panel A shows antibody titers for individuals not shedding CMV, shedding CMV in only one specimen (urine or saliva), or shedding CMV in both urine and saliva. Panel B shows antibody titers for individuals with low avidity versus high or intermediate avidity. Geometric mean antibody titers for each category are shown near the bottom of each panel. Circles are only plotted for individuals who had CMV IgG antibodies; negative results (i.e., antibody titers of zero) are not plotted. Black circles represent mothers' results and white circles represent Children's results. For easier viewing, some of the circles are slightly offset from their true values; actual values for inverse antibody titers consisted only of the following: 50, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600, and 3200.