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Persistence of Anti-ZIKV-IgG over Time Is Not a Useful Congenital Infection Marker in Infants Born to ZIKV-Infected Mothers: The NATZIG Cohort.

Conrado Milani CoutinhoJuliana Dias Crivelenti Pereira FernandesAparecida Yulie YamamotoSilvia Fabiana Biason de Moura NegriniBento Vidal de Moura NegriniSara Reis TeixeiraFabiana Rezende AmaralMárcia Soares Freitas da MottaAdriana Aparecida Tiraboschi BárbaroDavi Casale AragonMagelda MontoyaEva HarrisGeraldo DuarteMarisa Márcia Mussi-Pinhatanull For The Natzig Cohort Study Team
Published in: Viruses (2021)
Confirming ZIKV congenital infection is challenging because viral RNA is infrequently detected. We compared the presence of anti-ZIKV-IgM and the persistence of anti-ZIKV-IgG antibodies over 18 months in two cohorts of infants born to ZIKV-infected mothers: Cohort one: 30 infants with typical microcephaly or major brain abnormalities (Congenital Zika Syndrome-CZS); Cohort two: 123 asymptomatic infants. Serum samples obtained within 6 months of age were tested for anti-ZIKV-IgM. Anti-ZIKV-IgG was quantified in sequential samples collected at birth, 3-6 weeks, 3, 6, 12, and 18 months. ZIKV-RNA was never detected postnatally. Anti-ZIKV-IgM antibodies were detected at least once in 15/25 (60.0%; 95%CI: 38.7-78.9) infants with CZS and in 2/115 (1.7%; 95%CI: 0.2-6.1) asymptomatic infants. Although anti-ZIKV-IgG was always positive within 3-6 weeks of age, IgG levels decreased similarly over time in both cohorts. IgG levels decreased similarly in ZIKV-IgM-positive and ZIKV-IgM-negative CZS infants. Differently from other congenital infections, IgM would fail to diagnose 40% of severely symptomatic infants, and the persistence of IgG is not a useful marker for discriminating congenital infection among infants exposed to maternal ZIKV infection.
Keyphrases
  • zika virus
  • dengue virus
  • aedes aegypti
  • gestational age
  • multiple sclerosis
  • pregnant women
  • sars cov
  • physical activity
  • case report
  • white matter