| Literature DB >> 28182608 |
Krishika A Graham, Deborah J Fox, Achala Talati, Cristian Pantea, Laura Brady, Sondra L Carter, Eric Friedenberg, Neil M Vora, Marilyn L Browne, Christopher T Lee.
Abstract
Congenital Zika virus infection can cause microcephaly and other severe fetal neurological anomalies (1). To inform microcephaly surveillance efforts and assess ascertainment sources, the New York State Department of Health and the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene sought to determine the prevalence of microcephaly in New York during 2013-2015, before known importation of Zika virus infections. Suspected newborn microcephaly diagnoses were identified from 1) reports submitted by birth hospitals in response to a request and 2) queries of a hospital administrative discharge database for newborn microcephaly diagnoses. Anthropometric measurements, maternal demographics, and pregnancy characteristics were abstracted from newborn records from both sources. Diagnoses were classified using microcephaly case definitions developed by CDC and the National Birth Defects Prevention Network (NBDPN) (2). During 2013-2015, 284 newborns in New York met the case definition for severe congenital microcephaly (prevalence = 4.2 per 10,000 live births). Most newborns with severe congenital microcephaly were identified by both sources; 263 (93%) were identified through hospital requests and 256 (90%) were identified through administrative discharge data. The proportions of newborns with severe congenital microcephaly who were black (30%) or Hispanic (31%) were higher than the observed proportions of black (15%) or Hispanic (23%) infants among New York live births. Fifty-eight percent of newborns with severe congenital microcephaly were born to mothers with pregnancy complications or who had in utero or perinatal infections or teratogenic exposures, genetic disorders, or family histories of birth defects.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28182608 PMCID: PMC5657968 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6605a1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Microcephaly case counts by source of information and National Birth Defects Prevention Network (NBDPN) case definition — New York, 2013–2015
| Source of information | No. of suspected microcephaly cases | Confirmed* cases classified by NBDPN case definition | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall microcephaly† | Severe congenital microcephaly§ | ||
| No. (%) | No. (%) | ||
| Hospital request or SPARCS database | 529 | 499 (100) | 284 (100) |
| Hospital request | 495 | 470 (94) | 263 (93) |
| SPARCS database | 472 | 454 (91) | 256 (90) |
Abbreviation: SPARCS = Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System.
* Confirmed by retrospective chart review.
† NBDPN case definition for overall microcephaly: all physician diagnoses of microcephaly, regardless of head circumference percentile.
§ NBDPN case definition for severe congenital microcephaly: head circumference <3rd percentile for gestational age and sex.
Prevalence of severe congenital microcephaly, by health service area — New York, 2013–2015
| Health service area | No. of patients with microcephaly§ | No. of births¶ | No. of cases per 10,000 live births |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
| Western New York | 33 | 45,914 | 7.2 |
| Finger Lakes | 23 | 39,301 | 5.9 |
| Central New York | 16 | 45,412 | 3.5 |
| NY-Penn | 2 | 8,547 | 2.3 |
| Northeastern New York | 7 | 40,676 | 1.7 |
| Mid-Hudson | 22 | 70,512 | 3.1 |
| New York City | 162 | 336,047 | 4.8 |
| Nassau-Suffolk | 19 | 86,668 | 2.2 |
* Confirmed by retrospective chart review and classified by National Birth Defects Prevention Network (NBDPN) case definition.
† NBDPN case definition for severe congenital microcephaly: head circumference <3rd percentile for gestational age and sex.
§ Cases ascertained from 1) responses to a query of all 154 New York birth hospitals and 2) query of Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System administrative discharge database for all newborns with diagnosis code specifying microcephaly (International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification code 742.1 or International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification code Q02), born during 2013–2015 to women who resided in New York at the time of delivery.
¶ Number of live births obtained from the New York State Department of Health Vital Records.
Selected characteristics for cases (N = 284) of severe congenital microcephaly — New York, 2013–2015
| Characteristic | No. (%) |
|---|---|
|
| |
|
| |
| Female | 163 (57) |
| Male | 121 (43) |
|
| |
| Term (≥37 wks) | 193 (68) |
| Preterm (<37 wks) | 88 (31) |
| Missing | 3 (1) |
|
| |
| Normal weight (>2,500 g) | 116 (41) |
| Low birth weight (1,500–2,500 g) | 138 (49) |
| Very low birth weight (<1,500 g) | 30 (11) |
|
| |
| Singleton | 264 (93) |
| Twin | 18 (6) |
| Triplet or more | 2 (1) |
|
| |
|
| |
| <35 | 221 (78) |
| ≥35 | 56 (20) |
| Missing | 7 (2) |
|
| |
| Hispanic | 87 (31) |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 84 (30) |
| White, non-Hispanic | 84 (30) |
| Asian, non-Hispanic/Other/Missing | 29 (10) |
|
| |
| Yes | 241 (85) |
| No | 7 (2) |
| Missing | 36 (13) |
|
| |
| None | 119 (42) |
| Any | 165 (58) |
|
| |
| Any | 57 (20) |
| Preeclampsia | 22 (8) |
| Gestational diabetes | 12 (4) |
|
| |
| Any infection†† | 46 (16) |
| Maternal herpes simplex virus | 9 (3) |
| Infant cytomegalovirus infection | 10 (4) |
|
| |
| Any | 54 (19) |
| Alcohol | 7 (2) |
| Tobacco | 30 (11) |
| Illicit drugs | 33 (12) |
| Teratogenic medications§§ | 3 (2) |
|
| |
| Any | 1 (<1) |
| Radiation | 0 (—) |
| Lead | 1 (<1) |
| Mercury | 0 (—) |
|
| 37 (13) |
|
| 20 (7) |
|
| 7 (2) |
* Confirmed by retrospective chart review and classified by National Birth Defects Prevention Network (NBDPN) case definitions.
† NBDPN case definition for severe congenital microcephaly: head circumference <3rd percentile for gestational age and sex.
§ Maternal race and ethnicity variables primarily obtained from Vital Records and secondarily from the Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System database.
¶ Not mutually exclusive.
** Including preeclampsia, eclampsia, hypertension, and gestational diabetes.
†† Including infections with Toxoplasma gondii, rubella virus, cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus, human immunodeficiency virus, Treponema pallidum, and varicella, dengue, and lymphocytic choriomeningitis viruses.
§§ Including warfarin, angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, retinoic acid, and anticonvulsants.
¶¶ Documentation of any confirmed genetic anomaly such as trisomy, and gene deletions or duplications, or genomic imprinting.