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Zika virus vertical transmission in children with confirmed antenatal exposure.

Patrícia BrasilZilton Farias Meira de VasconcelosTara KerinClaudia Raja GabagliaIeda P RibeiroMyrna Cristina BonaldoLuana DamascenoMarcos Vinicius da Silva PoneSheila Moura PoneAndrea ZinIrena TsuiKristina AdachiJose Paulo PereiraStephanie L GawLiege CarvalhoDenise C CunhaLeticia GuidaMirza RochaJames D CherryLulan WangSaba AliyariGenhong ChengSuan-Sin FooWeiqiang ChenJae U JungElizabeth BrickleyMaria Elisabeth Lopes MoreiraKarin Nielsen-Saines
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
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.
Keyphrases
  • zika virus
  • young adults
  • dengue virus
  • real time pcr
  • aedes aegypti
  • pregnant women
  • preterm birth
  • high throughput
  • gestational age
  • body mass index
  • mass spectrometry
  • silver nanoparticles
  • single cell