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1874. Comparison of the Risk of Birth Defects in Live Births From Pregnant Women Infected and Not Infected by Zika Virus in Guadeloupe, 2016–2017

BACKGROUND: In the French Territories in the Americas (FTA), the risk of birth defects possibly associated with Zika virus (ZIKV) infection was estimated at 7% among fetuses/infants in a cohort of 546 women who developed a symptomatic RT-PCR confirmed ZIKV infection during pregnancy (NEJM 2018;378:9...

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Autores principales: Louise Funk, Anna, Hoen, Bruno, Tressières, Benoit, Vingadassalom, Ingrid, Janky, Eustase, Kadhel, Philippe, Ryan, Catherine, Gaete, Stanie, Fontanet, Arnaud
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6808883/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz359.104
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author Louise Funk, Anna
Hoen, Bruno
Tressières, Benoit
Vingadassalom, Ingrid
Janky, Eustase
Kadhel, Philippe
Ryan, Catherine
Gaete, Stanie
Fontanet, Arnaud
author_facet Louise Funk, Anna
Hoen, Bruno
Tressières, Benoit
Vingadassalom, Ingrid
Janky, Eustase
Kadhel, Philippe
Ryan, Catherine
Gaete, Stanie
Fontanet, Arnaud
author_sort Louise Funk, Anna
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In the French Territories in the Americas (FTA), the risk of birth defects possibly associated with Zika virus (ZIKV) infection was estimated at 7% among fetuses/infants in a cohort of 546 women who developed a symptomatic RT-PCR confirmed ZIKV infection during pregnancy (NEJM 2018;378:985–94). There was no concomitant prospective cohort of pregnant women without ZIKV infection to use as a control group. METHODS: In Guadeloupe, one of the 3 FTAs that participated in the FTA cohort study, pregnant women were recruited at the time of delivery and tested for ZIKV infection. Women who had a confirmed negative IgG serology test for ZIKV at delivery and no other positive ZIKV test during pregnancy were considered to be ZIKV noninfected. Information on the course of the pregnancy was collected retrospectively and outcomes of live born infants of ZIKV noninfected women were analyzed, using the same definition criteria as those used for the FTA cohort study. Pregnancy outcomes were compared with those of the 241 ZIKV-exposed live born infants in Guadeloupe, extracted from the FTA cohort. RESULTS: Of the 490 live born infants without in-utero exposure to ZIKV, 42 infants (8.6%) had neurological abnormalities that were described as “potentially linked to ZIKV infection”; all but one of these were microcephaly without any other brain or clinical abnormalities. The proportion of such abnormalities was not statistically different from that observed in the 241 live born infants with ZIKV exposure (6.6%, P = 0.36). When re-considering the combined 8 fetuses and 241 infants of women with confirmed ZIKV infection in Guadeloupe from the FTA cohort, only two (0.8%) live born infants and three (1.2%) medically aborted fetuses had birth defects that could still be linked to ZIKV infection. CONCLUSION: Isolated anthropometric and other mild neurological abnormalities had the same prevalence among live born infants with and without in utero ZIKV exposure. The high prevalence of isolated microcephaly among ZIKV noninfected women in our study population suggests that the sensitive definition for microcephaly, using a −2 SD cut-off with international growth curves, may lead to an overestimate of the rate of neurological complications of ZIKV infection during pregnancy. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported Disclosures.
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spelling pubmed-68088832019-10-28 1874. Comparison of the Risk of Birth Defects in Live Births From Pregnant Women Infected and Not Infected by Zika Virus in Guadeloupe, 2016–2017 Louise Funk, Anna Hoen, Bruno Tressières, Benoit Vingadassalom, Ingrid Janky, Eustase Kadhel, Philippe Ryan, Catherine Gaete, Stanie Fontanet, Arnaud Open Forum Infect Dis Abstracts BACKGROUND: In the French Territories in the Americas (FTA), the risk of birth defects possibly associated with Zika virus (ZIKV) infection was estimated at 7% among fetuses/infants in a cohort of 546 women who developed a symptomatic RT-PCR confirmed ZIKV infection during pregnancy (NEJM 2018;378:985–94). There was no concomitant prospective cohort of pregnant women without ZIKV infection to use as a control group. METHODS: In Guadeloupe, one of the 3 FTAs that participated in the FTA cohort study, pregnant women were recruited at the time of delivery and tested for ZIKV infection. Women who had a confirmed negative IgG serology test for ZIKV at delivery and no other positive ZIKV test during pregnancy were considered to be ZIKV noninfected. Information on the course of the pregnancy was collected retrospectively and outcomes of live born infants of ZIKV noninfected women were analyzed, using the same definition criteria as those used for the FTA cohort study. Pregnancy outcomes were compared with those of the 241 ZIKV-exposed live born infants in Guadeloupe, extracted from the FTA cohort. RESULTS: Of the 490 live born infants without in-utero exposure to ZIKV, 42 infants (8.6%) had neurological abnormalities that were described as “potentially linked to ZIKV infection”; all but one of these were microcephaly without any other brain or clinical abnormalities. The proportion of such abnormalities was not statistically different from that observed in the 241 live born infants with ZIKV exposure (6.6%, P = 0.36). When re-considering the combined 8 fetuses and 241 infants of women with confirmed ZIKV infection in Guadeloupe from the FTA cohort, only two (0.8%) live born infants and three (1.2%) medically aborted fetuses had birth defects that could still be linked to ZIKV infection. CONCLUSION: Isolated anthropometric and other mild neurological abnormalities had the same prevalence among live born infants with and without in utero ZIKV exposure. The high prevalence of isolated microcephaly among ZIKV noninfected women in our study population suggests that the sensitive definition for microcephaly, using a −2 SD cut-off with international growth curves, may lead to an overestimate of the rate of neurological complications of ZIKV infection during pregnancy. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported Disclosures. Oxford University Press 2019-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6808883/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz359.104 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Abstracts
Louise Funk, Anna
Hoen, Bruno
Tressières, Benoit
Vingadassalom, Ingrid
Janky, Eustase
Kadhel, Philippe
Ryan, Catherine
Gaete, Stanie
Fontanet, Arnaud
1874. Comparison of the Risk of Birth Defects in Live Births From Pregnant Women Infected and Not Infected by Zika Virus in Guadeloupe, 2016–2017
title 1874. Comparison of the Risk of Birth Defects in Live Births From Pregnant Women Infected and Not Infected by Zika Virus in Guadeloupe, 2016–2017
title_full 1874. Comparison of the Risk of Birth Defects in Live Births From Pregnant Women Infected and Not Infected by Zika Virus in Guadeloupe, 2016–2017
title_fullStr 1874. Comparison of the Risk of Birth Defects in Live Births From Pregnant Women Infected and Not Infected by Zika Virus in Guadeloupe, 2016–2017
title_full_unstemmed 1874. Comparison of the Risk of Birth Defects in Live Births From Pregnant Women Infected and Not Infected by Zika Virus in Guadeloupe, 2016–2017
title_short 1874. Comparison of the Risk of Birth Defects in Live Births From Pregnant Women Infected and Not Infected by Zika Virus in Guadeloupe, 2016–2017
title_sort 1874. comparison of the risk of birth defects in live births from pregnant women infected and not infected by zika virus in guadeloupe, 2016–2017
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6808883/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz359.104
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