| Literature DB >> 28796762 |
Noemi Borsay Hall, Kelly Broussard, Nicole Evert, Mark Canfield.
Abstract
On November 28, 2016, the Texas Department of State Health Services (Texas DSHS) reported its first confirmed case of local mosquitoborne Zika virus transmission in the city of Brownsville, located in south Texas along the U.S.-Mexico border. Zika virus infection during pregnancy has been linked to adverse congenital outcomes including microcephaly, neural tube defects, early brain malformations, structural eye abnormalities, congenital deafness, and limb contractures (1). On January 1, 2016, Texas DSHS established enhanced surveillance to identify women with laboratory evidence of possible Zika virus infection during pregnancy and suspected cases of Zika virus-associated birth defects among completed pregnancies.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28796762 PMCID: PMC5687783 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6631a5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Zika virus-associated neonatal birth defects among live-born infants and fetal losses delivered by pregnant women with evidence of Zika virus infection during pregnancy — Birth Defects Epidemiology and Surveillance Branch, Texas Department of State Health Services, January 2016–July 2017
| Characteristic | No. (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Laboratory evidence of possible recent maternal Zika virus infection* | Laboratory-confirmed maternal Zika virus infection† | |
|
|
| 170 (78) | 49 (22) |
| Completed pregnancies |
| 149 (81) | 36 (19) |
| Live-born infants§ |
| 147 (81) | 35 (19) |
| Pregnancy loss§ |
| 2 (67) | 1 (33) |
|
|
| 9 (60) | 6 (40) |
| Microcephaly |
| 6 (60) | 4 (40) |
| Other Zika-associated birth defects |
| 3 (60) | 2 (40) |
|
|
| 57 (71) | 23 (29) |
* Recent Zika virus infection detected by a positive Zika virus RNA Nucleic Acid Test (NAT) (e.g., reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction [RT-PCR]) on any maternal, placental, or fetal/infant specimen or detection of recent Zika virus infection or recent unspecified flavivirus infection by serologic tests on a maternal or infant specimen (i.e., either positive or equivocal Zika virus immunoglobulin M [IgM] and Zika virus plaque reduction neutralization test [PRNT] titer ≥10, regardless of dengue virus PRNT value or negative Zika virus IgM, and positive or equivocal dengue virus IgM, and Zika virus PRNT titer ≥10, regardless of dengue virus PRNT titer). Those persons who meet lab-confirmed criteria are not represented among those who have laboratory evidence of possible recent maternal Zika virus infection.
† Zika virus RNA documented by a positive NAT in a maternal, placental, or fetal/infant specimen or detection of recent Zika virus infection by serologic tests on a maternal or infant specimen (i.e., Zika virus IgM was positive or equivocal and Zika virus PRNT titer was ≥10 and dengue virus PRNT was <10).
§ Among completed pregnancies, including live-born infants and fetal losses at any time during gestation.
¶ Five of these infants had additional birth defects including holoprosencephaly, hydranencephaly, craniosynostosis, and clubfeet.
** Includes holoprosencephaly, ventriculomegaly, cataracts, choroid plexus cysts, and ventral pons hypoplasia.
††Testing not completed for 105 (57%) infants or fetuses, including three pregnancy losses, and 10 live-born infants for whom only a placental or cord blood specimen was tested; 13 specimens could not be tested because the specimens were unsatisfactory, and for the remaining 79 infants, the reason for not testing was not provided.