Congenital toxoplasmosis in the United States: clinical and serologic findings in infants born to mothers treated during pregnancy.
Tudor Rareș OlariuCindy PressJeanne TalucodKjerstie OlsonJosé Gilberto MontoyaPublished in: Parasite (Paris, France) (2019)
We assessed clinical and serologic findings in 25 infants with congenital toxoplasmosis born to mothers treated during pregnancy in the United States. Results indicate a lower prevalence of eye findings and hydrocephalus in the group of infants born to treated mothers (62.5% and 38.5%, respectively) compared to results on the same pathologies reported in our previous cohort of infants born to untreated mothers (92.2% and 67.7%, respectively). The sensitivity of the IgM ISAGA and IgA ELISA in the present study were lower (44% and 60%, respectively) compared to sensitivity of these methods in our previously studied group of infants born to untreated mothers (86.6% and 76.5%, respectively). These findings provide further evidence that anti-parasitic treatment if administered during pregnancy can contribute to better clinical outcomes, even in countries where systematic screening and treatment have not been routinely implemented.