Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Queens, New York.
JAMA. 2017 Jan 3;317(1):59-68. doi: 10.1001/jama.2016.19006.
Understanding the risk of birth defects associated with Zika virus infection during pregnancy may help guide communication, prevention, and planning efforts. In the absence of Zika virus, microcephaly occurs in approximately 7 per 10 000 live births.
To estimate the preliminary proportion of fetuses or infants with birth defects after maternal Zika virus infection by trimester of infection and maternal symptoms.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Completed pregnancies with maternal, fetal, or infant laboratory evidence of possible recent Zika virus infection and outcomes reported in the continental United States and Hawaii from January 15 to September 22, 2016, in the US Zika Pregnancy Registry, a collaboration between the CDC and state and local health departments.
Laboratory evidence of possible recent Zika virus infection in a maternal, placental, fetal, or infant sample.
Birth defects potentially Zika associated: brain abnormalities with or without microcephaly, neural tube defects and other early brain malformations, eye abnormalities, and other central nervous system consequences.
Among 442 completed pregnancies in women (median age, 28 years; range, 15-50 years) with laboratory evidence of possible recent Zika virus infection, birth defects potentially related to Zika virus were identified in 26 (6%; 95% CI, 4%-8%) fetuses or infants. There were 21 infants with birth defects among 395 live births and 5 fetuses with birth defects among 47 pregnancy losses. Birth defects were reported for 16 of 271 (6%; 95% CI, 4%-9%) pregnant asymptomatic women and 10 of 167 (6%; 95% CI, 3%-11%) symptomatic pregnant women. Of the 26 affected fetuses or infants, 4 had microcephaly and no reported neuroimaging, 14 had microcephaly and brain abnormalities, and 4 had brain abnormalities without microcephaly; reported brain abnormalities included intracranial calcifications, corpus callosum abnormalities, abnormal cortical formation, cerebral atrophy, ventriculomegaly, hydrocephaly, and cerebellar abnormalities. Infants with microcephaly (18/442) represent 4% of completed pregnancies. Birth defects were reported in 9 of 85 (11%; 95% CI, 6%-19%) completed pregnancies with maternal symptoms or exposure exclusively in the first trimester (or first trimester and periconceptional period), with no reports of birth defects among fetuses or infants with prenatal exposure to Zika virus infection only in the second or third trimesters.
Among pregnant women in the United States with completed pregnancies and laboratory evidence of possible recent Zika infection, 6% of fetuses or infants had evidence of Zika-associated birth defects, primarily brain abnormalities and microcephaly, whereas among women with first-trimester Zika infection, 11% of fetuses or infants had evidence of Zika-associated birth defects. These findings support the importance of screening pregnant women for Zika virus exposure.
了解 Zika 病毒感染孕妇相关的出生缺陷风险,有助于指导沟通、预防和规划工作。在没有 Zika 病毒的情况下,每 10000 例活产中约有 7 例出现小头畸形。
按感染三孕期和母体症状来估计 Zika 病毒感染孕妇所生胎儿或婴儿出现出生缺陷的初步比例。
设计、地点和参与者:2016 年 1 月 15 日至 9 月 22 日,美国 Zika 妊娠登记处(CDC 与州和地方卫生部门合作)报告了美国大陆和夏威夷有母体、胎盘、胎儿或婴儿实验室证据提示近期 Zika 病毒感染的已完成妊娠及其结局。
母体、胎盘、胎儿或婴儿样本中存在 Zika 病毒近期感染的实验室证据。
可能与 Zika 相关的出生缺陷:有或无脑异常、无脑神经管缺陷和其他早期脑畸形、眼部异常以及其他中枢神经系统并发症。
在 442 例有实验室证据提示近期 Zika 病毒感染的孕妇(中位年龄为 28 岁;范围 15-50 岁)所生已完成妊娠中,有 26 例(6%;95%CI,4%-8%)胎儿或婴儿出现潜在与 Zika 病毒相关的出生缺陷。395 例活产中有 21 例婴儿有出生缺陷,47 例妊娠丢失中有 5 例胎儿有出生缺陷。271 例无症状孕妇中有 16 例(6%;95%CI,4%-9%)和 167 例有症状孕妇中有 10 例(6%;95%CI,3%-11%)报告有出生缺陷。在 26 例受影响的胎儿或婴儿中,4 例有小头畸形且无报告神经影像学异常,14 例有小头畸形和脑异常,4 例无脑异常但有脑异常;报告的脑异常包括颅内钙化、胼胝体异常、皮质形成异常、脑萎缩、脑室扩大、脑积水和小脑异常。患有小头畸形的婴儿(442 例)占已完成妊娠的 4%。在母体有症状或仅在第一孕期(或第一孕期及围孕期)暴露于 Zika 病毒的 85 例已完成妊娠中报告了 9 例(11%;95%CI,6%-19%)出生缺陷,而在仅第二或第三孕期有产前 Zika 病毒感染暴露的胎儿或婴儿中无出生缺陷报告。
在美国有已完成妊娠且实验室证据提示近期 Zika 感染的孕妇中,6%的胎儿或婴儿有 Zika 相关出生缺陷的证据,主要为脑异常和小头畸形,而在第一孕期有 Zika 感染的孕妇中,11%的胎儿或婴儿有 Zika 相关出生缺陷的证据。这些发现支持对孕妇进行 Zika 病毒暴露筛查的重要性。