| Literature DB >> 35051132 |
Nicole M Roth, Megan R Reynolds, Elizabeth L Lewis, Kate R Woodworth, Shana Godfred-Cato, Augustina Delaney, Amanda Akosa, Miguel Valencia-Prado, Maura Lash, Amanda Elmore, Peter Langlois, Salma Khuwaja, Aifili Tufa, Esther M Ellis, Eirini Nestoridi, Caleb Lyu, Nicole D Longcore, Monika Piccardi, Leah Lind, Sharon Starr, Loletha Johnson, Shea E Browne, Michael Gosciminski, Paz E Velasco, Fern Johnson-Clarke, Autumn Locklear, Mary Chan, Jane Fornoff, Karrie-Ann E Toews, Julius Tonzel, Natalie S Marzec, Shelby Hale, Amy E Nance, Teri Willabus, Dianna Contreras, Sowmya N Adibhatla, Lisa Iguchi, Emily Potts, Elizabeth Schiffman, Katherine Lolley, Brandi Stricklin, Elizabeth Ludwig, Helentina Garstang, Meghan Marx, Emily Ferrell, Camille Moreno-Gorrin, Kimberly Signs, Paul Romitti, Vinita Leedom, Brennan Martin, Louisa Castrodale, Amie Cook, Carolyn Fredette, Lindsay Denson, Laura Cronquist, John F Nahabedian, Neha Shinde, Kara Polen, Suzanne M Gilboa, Stacey W Martin, Janet D Cragan, Dana Meaney-Delman, Margaret A Honein, Van T Tong, Cynthia A Moore.
Abstract
Zika virus infection during pregnancy can cause serious birth defects of the brain and eyes, including intracranial calcifications, cerebral or cortical atrophy, chorioretinal abnormalities, and optic nerve abnormalities (1,2). The frequency of these Zika-associated brain and eye defects, based on data from the U.S. Zika Pregnancy and Infant Registry (USZPIR), has been previously reported in aggregate (3,4). This report describes the frequency of individual Zika-associated brain and eye defects among infants from pregnancies with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection. Among 6,799 live-born infants in USZPIR born during December 1, 2015-March 31, 2018, 4.6% had any Zika-associated birth defect; in a subgroup of pregnancies with a positive nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT) for Zika virus infection, the percentage was 6.1% of live-born infants. The brain and eye defects most frequently reported included microcephaly, corpus callosum abnormalities, intracranial calcification, abnormal cortical gyral patterns, ventriculomegaly, cerebral or cortical atrophy, chorioretinal abnormalities, and optic nerve abnormalities. Among infants with any Zika-associated birth defect, one third had more than one defect reported. Certain brain and eye defects in an infant might prompt suspicion of prenatal Zika virus infection. These findings can help target surveillance efforts to the most common brain and eye defects associated with Zika virus infection during pregnancy should a Zika virus outbreak reemerge, and might provide a signal to the reemergence of Zika virus, particularly in geographic regions without ongoing comprehensive Zika virus surveillance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35051132 PMCID: PMC8774158 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm7103a1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
Frequency of Zika-associated birth defects,* by selected characteristics among live-born infants from pregnancies with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection — U.S. Zika Pregnancy and Infant Registry, December 1, 2015–March 31, 2018
| Characteristic | From pregnancies with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection† | From pregnancies with positive Zika virus NAAT result§ | ||
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| No./Total no. | % (95% CI) | No./Total no. | % (95% CI) | |
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| U.S. states and DC | 124/2,288 | 5.4 (4.5–6.5) | 38/374 | 10.2 (7.2–14.0) |
| U.S. territories and freely associated states | 191/4,511 | 4.2 (3.7–4.9) | 100/1,883 | 5.3 (4.3–6.5) |
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| 1st | 108/2,121 | 5.1 (4.2–6.2) | 43/539 | 8.0 (5.8–10.8) |
| 2nd | 107/2,495 | 4.3 (3.5–5.2) | 62/1,028 | 6.0 (4.6–7.7) |
| 3rd | 82/2,039 | 4.0 (3.2–5.0) | 25/657 | 3.8 (2.5–5.6) |
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| Signs/Symptoms of Zika virus disease | 126/2,379 | 5.3 (4.4–6.3) | 92/1,596 | 5.8 (4.7–7.1) |
| No signs/symptoms of Zika virus disease | 186/4,382 | 4.2 (3.7–4.9) | 46/661 | 7.0 (5.1–9.3) |
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| Neuroimaging | 258/4,086 | 6.3 (5.6–7.1) | 120/1,595 | 7.5 (6.2–9.0) |
| Ophthalmology | 167/2,456 | 6.8 (5.8–7.9) | 79/1,072 | 7.4 (5.8–9.2) |
Abbreviations: DC = District of Columbia; NAAT = nucleic acid amplification test; RT-PCR = reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction; USZPIR = U.S. Zika Pregnancy and Infant Registry.
* Zika-associated birth defects include selected congenital brain anomalies (intracranial calcifications, cerebral or cortical atrophy, abnormal cortical gyral patterns, corpus callosum abnormalities, cerebellar abnormalities, porencephaly, hydranencephaly, or 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 below the third percentile for infant sex and gestational age based on INTERGROWTH-21st online percentile calculator unless infants meet criteria of possible measurement inaccuracy. http://intergrowth21.ndog.ox.ac.uk/
† 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 NAAT (e.g., 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 NAAT (e.g., RT-PCR).
¶ U.S. territories in USZPIR are American Samoa, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands; freely associated states are Federated States of Micronesia and the Marshall Islands.
** Among pregnancies in which birth occurred in the U.S. states and DC, symptom onset date, travel dates to an endemic region, or date of earliest laboratory evidence of Zika virus infection were used to calculate trimester of exposure. Among pregnancies in which birth occurred in U.S. territories and freely associated states, symptom onset date or date of earliest laboratory evidence of Zika virus infection were used to calculate trimester of exposure.
†† Unknown trimester of exposure is not shown because of small cell sizes; 144 pregnancies were missing trimester of exposure.
§§ Zika virus infections that occurred during the periconceptual period, which is defined as 4 weeks before last menstrual period, are included in the first trimester of exposure.
¶¶ Maternal symptom status is not shown because of small cell sizes; 38 pregnancies were missing maternal symptom status.
*** Signs and symptoms included fever, arthralgia, conjunctivitis, rash, and other clinical signs or symptoms that are consistent with Zika virus disease.
Individual Zika-associated birth defects among live-born infants from pregnancies with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection — U.S. Zika Pregnancy and Infant Registry, December 1, 2015–March 31, 2018
| Birth defect | No. of infants (%) | |
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| From pregnancies with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection* (n = 6,799) | From pregnancies with positive Zika virus NAAT result† (n = 2,257) | |
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| Any brain abnormality/microcephaly | 275 (4.0) | 126 (5.6) |
| Microcephaly | 214 (3.1) | 100 (4.4) |
| Corpus callosum abnormalities | 64 (0.9) | 40 (1.8) |
| Intracranial calcifications | 58 (0.9) | 27 (1.2) |
| Abnormal cortical gyral patterns | 56 (0.8) | 29 (1.3) |
| Ventriculomegaly/Hydrocephaly | 53 (0.8) | 34 (1.5) |
| Cerebral or cortical atrophy | 43 (0.6) | 24 (1.1) |
| Cerebellar abnormalities | 27 (0.4) | 15 (0.7) |
| Fetal brain disruption sequence | 12 (0.2) | 10 (0.4) |
| Brainstem abnormalities | 8 (0.1) | 6 (0.3) |
| Porencephaly/Hydranencephaly | 5 (0.1) | 3 (0.1) |
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| Any eye abnormality | 76 (1.1) | 34 (1.5) |
| Chorioretinal atrophy, scarring, or pigmentary changes | 47 (0.7) | 25 (1.1) |
| Optic nerve abnormalities | 34 (0.5) | 13 (0.6) |
| Coloboma | 7 (0.1) | 5 (0.2) |
| Congenital cataract | 7 (0.1) | 3 (0.1) |
| Microphthalmia | 5 (0.1) | 1 (—) |
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| Multiple brain or eye abnormalities | 110 (1.6) | 55 (2.4) |
| Brain and eye abnormalities | 36 (0.5) | 22 (1.0) |
| One or more brain abnormalities only | 239 (3.5) | 104 (4.6) |
| One brain abnormality or microcephaly only | 173 (2.5) | 72 (3.2) |
| Microcephaly only§§ | 144 (2.1) | 58 (2.6) |
| Microcephaly only and SGA | 98 (1.4) | 37 (1.6) |
| One or more eye abnormalities only | 40 (0.6) | 12 (0.5) |
| One eye abnormality only | 32 (0.5) | 11 (0.5) |
Abbreviations: NAAT = nucleic acid amplification test; RT-PCR = reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction; SGA = small for gestational age.
* 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 NAAT (e.g., 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 NAAT.
§ Zika-associated birth defects include selected congenital brain anomalies (intracranial calcifications, cerebral or cortical atrophy, abnormal cortical gyral patterns, corpus callosum abnormalities, cerebellar abnormalities, porencephaly, hydranencephaly, or 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 below the third percentile for infant sex and gestational age based on INTERGROWTH-21st online percentile calculator unless infants meet criteria of possible measurement inaccuracy. http://intergrowth21.ndog.ox.ac.uk/
¶ Among infants with brain abnormalities, microcephaly, or both, 24 (0.4%) and 11 (0.5%) infants also had arthrogryposis among pregnancies with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection during pregnancy and NAAT-confirmed Zika virus infection, respectively.
** Infants with birth head circumference below the third percentile based on INTERGROWTH-21st. http://intergrowth21.ndog.ox.ac.uk/
†† Among infants with microcephaly, 141 and 64 also had a birthweight below the 10th percentile (SGA) among pregnancies with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection during pregnancy and NAAT-confirmed Zika virus infection, respectively.
§§ Neuroimaging was available for 66.0% and 29.2% of infants with microcephaly only from pregnancies with laboratory evidence of confirmed or possible Zika virus infection during pregnancy and NAAT-confirmed Zika virus infection, respectively.