Krauer Fabienne, Riesen Maurane, Reveiz Ludovic, Oladapo Olufemi T, Martínez-Vega Ruth, Porgo Teegwendé V, Haefliger Anina, Broutet Nathalie J, Low Nicola
Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Bern, Switzerland.
Pan American Health Organization, Washington DC, United States of America.
PLoS Med. 2017 Jan 3;14(1):e1002203. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002203. eCollection 2017 Jan.
The World Health Organization (WHO) stated in March 2016 that there was scientific consensus that the mosquito-borne Zika virus was a cause of the neurological disorder Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and of microcephaly and other congenital brain abnormalities based on rapid evidence assessments. Decisions about causality require systematic assessment to guide public health actions. The objectives of this study were to update and reassess the evidence for causality through a rapid and systematic review about links between Zika virus infection and (a) congenital brain abnormalities, including microcephaly, in the foetuses and offspring of pregnant women and (b) GBS in any population, and to describe the process and outcomes of an expert assessment of the evidence about causality.
The study had three linked components. First, in February 2016, we developed a causality framework that defined questions about the relationship between Zika virus infection and each of the two clinical outcomes in ten dimensions: temporality, biological plausibility, strength of association, alternative explanations, cessation, dose-response relationship, animal experiments, analogy, specificity, and consistency. Second, we did a systematic review (protocol number CRD42016036693). We searched multiple online sources up to May 30, 2016 to find studies that directly addressed either outcome and any causality dimension, used methods to expedite study selection, data extraction, and quality assessment, and summarised evidence descriptively. Third, WHO convened a multidisciplinary panel of experts who assessed the review findings and reached consensus statements to update the WHO position on causality. We found 1,091 unique items up to May 30, 2016. For congenital brain abnormalities, including microcephaly, we included 72 items; for eight of ten causality dimensions (all except dose-response relationship and specificity), we found that more than half the relevant studies supported a causal association with Zika virus infection. For GBS, we included 36 items, of which more than half the relevant studies supported a causal association in seven of ten dimensions (all except dose-response relationship, specificity, and animal experimental evidence). Articles identified nonsystematically from May 30 to July 29, 2016 strengthened the review findings. The expert panel concluded that (a) the most likely explanation of available evidence from outbreaks of Zika virus infection and clusters of microcephaly is that Zika virus infection during pregnancy is a cause of congenital brain abnormalities including microcephaly, and (b) the most likely explanation of available evidence from outbreaks of Zika virus infection and GBS is that Zika virus infection is a trigger of GBS. The expert panel recognised that Zika virus alone may not be sufficient to cause either congenital brain abnormalities or GBS but agreed that the evidence was sufficient to recommend increased public health measures. Weaknesses are the limited assessment of the role of dengue virus and other possible cofactors, the small number of comparative epidemiological studies, and the difficulty in keeping the review up to date with the pace of publication of new research.
Rapid and systematic reviews with frequent updating and open dissemination are now needed both for appraisal of the evidence about Zika virus infection and for the next public health threats that will emerge. This systematic review found sufficient evidence to say that Zika virus is a cause of congenital abnormalities and is a trigger of GBS.
世界卫生组织(WHO)于2016年3月指出,基于快速证据评估,科学界已达成共识,即蚊媒传播的寨卡病毒是导致神经系统疾病吉兰 - 巴雷综合征(GBS)以及小头畸形和其他先天性脑部异常的原因。关于因果关系的判定需要系统评估,以指导公共卫生行动。本研究的目的是通过对寨卡病毒感染与(a)孕妇胎儿及后代的先天性脑部异常(包括小头畸形)以及(b)任何人群中的GBS之间的联系进行快速系统评价,更新并重新评估因果关系的证据,并描述对因果关系证据进行专家评估的过程和结果。
该研究有三个相互关联的部分。首先,2016年2月,我们制定了一个因果关系框架,从十个维度定义了关于寨卡病毒感染与两种临床结果之间关系的问题:时间顺序、生物学合理性、关联强度、其他解释、终止性、剂量反应关系、动物实验、类推、特异性和一致性。其次,我们进行了一项系统评价(方案编号CRD42016036693)。我们检索了截至2016年5月30日的多个在线资源,以查找直接涉及任一结果及任何因果关系维度的研究,采用加快研究筛选、数据提取和质量评估的方法,并对证据进行描述性总结。第三,WHO召集了一个多学科专家小组,该小组评估了评价结果并达成共识声明,以更新WHO关于因果关系的立场。截至2016年5月30日,我们共找到1091篇独特的文献。对于包括小头畸形在内的先天性脑部异常,我们纳入了72篇文献;对于十个因果关系维度中的八个维度(剂量反应关系和特异性除外),我们发现超过一半的相关研究支持与寨卡病毒感染存在因果关联。对于GBS,我们纳入了36篇文献,其中超过一半的相关研究在十个维度中的七个维度(剂量反应关系、特异性和动物实验证据除外)支持因果关联。2016年5月30日至7月29日非系统检索到的文章强化了评价结果。专家小组得出结论:(a)寨卡病毒感染暴发和小头畸形聚集的现有证据最可能的解释是,孕期寨卡病毒感染是包括小头畸形在内的先天性脑部异常的原因;(b)寨卡病毒感染暴发和GBS的现有证据最可能的解释是,寨卡病毒感染是GBS的触发因素。专家小组认识到,仅寨卡病毒本身可能不足以导致先天性脑部异常或GBS,但一致认为现有证据足以建议加强公共卫生措施。不足之处在于对登革热病毒和其他可能的辅助因素的作用评估有限、比较性流行病学研究数量较少以及难以跟上新研究发表的速度来更新评价。
现在需要进行快速系统评价并频繁更新和公开传播,以评估关于寨卡病毒感染的证据以及即将出现的下一个公共卫生威胁。这项系统评价发现了充分的证据表明寨卡病毒是先天性异常的一个原因,并且是GBS的触发因素。