Complexities of Zika Diagnosis and Evaluation in a U.S. Congenital Zika Program

Sarah B Mulkey, Emily Ansusinha, Caitlin Cristante, Stephanie M Russo, Cara Biddle, Youssef A Kousa, Lindsay Pesacreta, Barbara Jantausch, Benjamin Hanisch, Nada Harik, Rana F Hamdy, Andrea Hahn, Taeun Chang, Mohamad Jaafar, Tracey Ambrose, Gilbert Vezina, Dorothy I Bulas, David Wessel, Adre J du Plessis, Roberta L DeBiasi, Sarah B Mulkey, Emily Ansusinha, Caitlin Cristante, Stephanie M Russo, Cara Biddle, Youssef A Kousa, Lindsay Pesacreta, Barbara Jantausch, Benjamin Hanisch, Nada Harik, Rana F Hamdy, Andrea Hahn, Taeun Chang, Mohamad Jaafar, Tracey Ambrose, Gilbert Vezina, Dorothy I Bulas, David Wessel, Adre J du Plessis, Roberta L DeBiasi

Abstract

The objective of the study was to describe the complexity of diagnosis and evaluation of Zika-exposed pregnant women/fetuses and infants in a U.S. Congenital Zika Program. Pregnant women/fetuses and/or infants referred for clinical evaluation to the Congenital Zika Program at Children's National (Washington, DC) from January 2016 to June 2018 were included. We recorded the timing of maternal Zika-virus (ZIKV) exposure and ZIKV laboratory testing results. Based on laboratory testing, cases were either confirmed, possible, or unlikely ZIKV infection. Prenatal and postnatal imaging by ultrasound and/or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were categorized as normal, nonspecific, or as findings of congenital Zika syndrome (CZS). Of 81 women-fetus/infant pairs evaluated, 72 (89%) had confirmed ZIKV exposure; 18% of women were symptomatic; only a minority presented for evaluation within the time frame for laboratory detection. Zika virus could only be confirmed in 29 (40%) cases, was possible in 26 (36%) cases, and was excluded in 17 (24%) cases. Five cases (7%) had prenatal ultrasound and MRI findings of CZS, but in only three was ZIKV confirmed by laboratory testing. Because of timing of exposure to presentation, ZIKV infection could not be excluded in many cases. Neuroimaging found CZS in 7% of cases, and in many patients, there were nonspecific imaging findings that warrant long-term follow-up. Overall, adherence to postnatal recommended follow-up evaluations was modest, representing a barrier to care. These challenges may be instructive to future pediatric multidisciplinary clinics for congenital infectious/noninfectious threats to pregnant women and their infants.

Conflict of interest statement

Disclosures: DeBiasi, Mulkey, and Biddle had a contract by U.S. Centers for Disease Control/Vysnova to provide Zika-related technical expertise; Mulkey (Awardee), DeBiasi, Biddle, and du Plessis (mentors) receive research support for neurodevelopmental follow-up of Zika-exposed infants from the Thrasher Research Fund.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Congenital Zika Program at Children’s National Patient ZIKV status diagram. Cases were defined as ZIKV infection, possible ZIKV, or as unlikely ZIKV based on laboratory testing. ZIKV = Zika virus.

Source: PubMed

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