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Zika virus vertical transmission in children with confirmed antenatal exposure.

Authors :
Brasil, Patrícia
Vasconcelos, Zilton
Kerin, Tara
Gabaglia, Claudia Raja
Ribeiro, Ieda P.
Bonaldo, Myrna C.
Damasceno, Luana
Pone, Marcos V.
Pone, Sheila
Zin, Andrea
Tsui, Irena
Adachi, Kristina
Pereira, Jose Paulo
Gaw, Stephanie L.
Carvalho, Liege
Cunha, Denise C.
Guida, Leticia
Rocha, Mirza
Cherry, James D.
Wang, Lulan
Source :
Nature Communications; 7/14/2020, Vol. 11 Issue 1, p1-8, 8p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We report Zika virus (ZIKV) vertical transmission in 130 infants born to PCR+ mothers at the time of the Rio de Janeiro epidemic of 2015–2016. Serum and urine collected from birth through the first year of life were tested by quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and/or IgM Zika MAC-ELISA. Four hundred and seven specimens are evaluated; 161 sera tested by PCR and IgM assays, 85 urines by PCR. Sixty-five percent of children (N = 84) are positive in at least one assay. Of 94 children tested within 3 months of age, 70% are positive. Positivity declines to 33% after 3 months. Five children are PCR+ beyond 200 days of life. Concordance between IgM and PCR results is 52%, sensitivity 65%, specificity 40% (positive PCR results as gold standard). IgM and serum PCR are 61% concordant; serum and urine PCR 55%. Most children (65%) are clinically normal. Equal numbers of children with abnormal findings (29 of 45, 64%) and normal findings (55 of 85, 65%) have positive results, p = 0.98. Earlier maternal trimester of infection is associated with positive results (p = 0.04) but not clinical disease (p = 0.98). ZIKV vertical transmission is frequent but laboratory confirmed infection is not necessarily associated with infant abnormalities. Here, Brasil et al. investigate mother to child Zika virus (ZIKV) transmission rates in a large longitudinal cohort of pregnant ZIKV-positive women with their infants followed from the time of maternal infection through birth and onwards, finding high in utero transmission rates that do not predict clinical outcomes, suggesting follow-up of children with antenatal ZIKV exposure is necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
144564298
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17331-0