| Literature DB >> 30091967 |
Marion E Rice, Romeo R Galang, Nicole M Roth, Sascha R Ellington, Cynthia A Moore, Miguel Valencia-Prado, Esther M Ellis, Aifili John Tufa, Livinson A Taulung, Julia M Alfred, Janice Pérez-Padilla, Camille A Delgado-López, Sherif R Zaki, Sarah Reagan-Steiner, Julu Bhatnagar, John F Nahabedian, Megan R Reynolds, Marshalyn Yeargin-Allsopp, Laura J Viens, Samantha M Olson, Abbey M Jones, Madelyn A Baez-Santiago, Philip Oppong-Twene, Kelley VanMaldeghem, Elizabeth L Simon, Jazmyn T Moore, Kara D Polen, Braeanna Hillman, Ruta Ropeti, Leishla Nieves-Ferrer, Mariam Marcano-Huertas, Carolee A Masao, Edlen J Anzures, Ransen L Hansen, Stephany I Pérez-Gonzalez, Carla P Espinet-Crespo, Mildred Luciano-Román, Carrie K Shapiro-Mendoza, Suzanne M Gilboa, Margaret A Honein.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Zika virus infection during pregnancy causes serious birth defects and might be associated with neurodevelopmental abnormalities in children. Early identification of and intervention for neurodevelopmental problems can improve cognitive, social, and behavioral functioning.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30091967 PMCID: PMC6089332 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6731e1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGURE 1Children born to mothers with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection during pregnancy — U.S. Zika Pregnancy and Infant Registry, U.S. territories and freely associated states, February 1, 2017–June 1, 2018*,†,§,¶,**
* Percentages might not sum to 100 because of rounding.
† Date and location of pregnancy completion were required to document a completed pregnancy in U.S. territories and freely associated states.
§ Live-born infants include 4,199 infants from 4,165 pregnancies (includes 34 multiple gestation pregnancies).
¶ Of the 691 children with no reported follow-up care as of June 1, 2018, 99 were reported to have moved out of U.S. territories and freely associated states.
** Of the 1,450 children aged ≥1 year by February 1, 2018, with some reported follow-up care by June 1, 2018, 154 were reported to have moved out of U.S. territories and freely associated states.
FIGURE 2Percentage of children aged ≥1 year born to mothers with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection during pregnancy reported to have received recommended clinical evaluations*,†,§,¶,** among children with reported follow-up care†† (n = 1,450) — U.S. Zika Pregnancy and Infant Registry (USZPIR), U.S. territories and freely associated states, February 1, 2017–June 1, 2018
Abbreviation: ABR = auditory brainstem response.
* Physical examination after birth denotes at least one physical examination, indicated by length/height, weight, or head circumference measurements and date of measurements, at age >14 days reported to the USZPIR.
Developmental screening or evaluation denotes at least one developmental screening or evaluation result at age >14 days reported to the USZPIR.
Neuroimaging denotes at least one postnatal imaging of the infant head (cranial ultrasound, computed tomography, or magnetic resonance imaging) result reported to the USZPIR.
ABR-based hearing screening or evaluation denotes at least one ABR-based hearing screen or evaluation result reported to the USZPIR. Of 1,450 children with reported follow-up care, 96% had at least one hearing screen or evaluation of any kind reported to the USZPIR.
** Ophthalmological evaluation denotes at least one ophthalmological evaluation result reported to the USZPIR.
Any clinical care at age >14 days reported to the USZPIR.
Outcomes among children aged ≥1 year from pregnancies with any laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection (n = 1,450) and with nucleic acid test–confirmed Zika virus infection (n = 943) and with reported follow-up care* — U.S. Zika Pregnancy and Infant Registry (USZPIR), U.S. territories and freely associated states, February 1, 2017–June 1, 2018
| Zika-related outcomes | Any laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection during pregnancy (n = 1,450)† No. (%) | Pregnancies with nucleic acid test–confirmed Zika virus infection (n = 943)§ No. (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Zika-associated birth defect¶ | 87 (6) | 62 (7) |
| Neurodevelopmental abnormality possibly associated with congenital Zika virus infection** | 136 (9) | 99 (10) |
| Zika-associated birth defect and neurodevelopmental abnormality possibly associated with congenital Zika virus infection | 20 (1) | 17 (2) |
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| Microcephaly at birth†† | 64 (4) | 44 (5) |
| Postnatal-onset microcephaly only§§ | 20 (1) | 12 (1) |
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* Any clinical care at age >14 days reported to the USZPIR.
† Includes maternal, placental, or infant laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection during pregnancy based on presence of Zika virus RNA by a positive nucleic acid test (e.g., reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction [RT-PCR]), serologic evidence of a Zika virus infection, or serologic evidence of an unspecified flavivirus infection.
§ Includes maternal, placental, or infant laboratory evidence of confirmed Zika virus infection during pregnancy based on presence of Zika virus RNA by a positive nucleic acid test (e.g., RT-PCR).
¶ Includes Zika-associated birth defect detected from birth to age 2 years with or without neurodevelopmental abnormality possibly associated with congenital Zika virus infection. Zika-associated birth defects include selected congenital brain anomalies (intracranial calcifications; cerebral atrophy; abnormal cortical formation; corpus callosum abnormalities; cerebellar abnormalities; porencephaly; hydranencephaly; ventriculomegaly/hydrocephaly); selected congenital eye anomalies (microphthalmia or anophthalmia; coloboma; cataract; intraocular calcifications; chorioretinal anomalies involving the macula, excluding retinopathy of prematurity; and optic nerve atrophy, pallor, and other optic nerve abnormalities); and/or microcephaly at birth (birth head circumference <3rd percentile for infant sex and gestational age based on INTERGROWTH-21st online percentile calculator (http://intergrowth21.ndog.ox.ac.uk/)).
** Includes neurodevelopmental abnormality possibly associated with congenital Zika virus infection detected from birth to age 2 years, with or without Zika-associated birth defect. Neurodevelopmental abnormalities possibly associated with congenital Zika virus infection include hearing abnormalities; congenital contractures; seizures; body tone abnormalities; movement abnormalities; swallowing abnormalities; possible developmental delay; possible visual impairment; and/or postnatal-onset microcephaly (two most recent head circumference measurements reported from follow-up care <3rd percentile for child’s sex and age based on World Health Organization child growth standards; downward trajectory of head circumference percentiles with most recent <3rd percentile. Age at measurement was adjusted for gestational age in infants born at <40 weeks’ gestational age, through age 24 months chronological age).
†† Microcephaly at birth is a subset of Zika-associated birth defects and was defined as birth head circumference <3rd percentile for infant sex and gestational age based on INTERGROWTH-21st online percentile calculator (http://intergrowth21.ndog.ox.ac.uk/)).
§§ Postnatal-onset microcephaly is a subset of neurodevelopmental abnormalities possibly associated with congenital Zika virus infection and was defined as two most recent head circumference measurements reported from follow-up care <3rd percentile for child’s sex and age based on World Health Organization child growth standards; downward trajectory of head circumference percentiles with most recent <3rd percentile. Age at measurement was adjusted for gestational age in infants born at <40 weeks’ gestational age, through age 24 months chronological age).