Division of Birth Defects and Infant Disorders, National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, United States.
Dirección de Vigilancia y Análisis de Riesgo en Salud Pública, Instituto Nacional de Salud, Bogotá, Distrito Capital, Colombia.
J Pediatr. 2020 Jul;222:112-119.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2020.02.023. Epub 2020 May 13.
To estimate the prevalence of microcephaly and central nervous system (CNS) defects during the Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemic in Colombia and proportion attributable to congenital ZIKV infection.
Clinical and laboratory data for cases of microcephaly and/or CNS defects reported to national surveillance between 2015 and 2017 were reviewed and classified by a panel of clinical subject matter experts. Maternal and fetal/infant biologic specimens were tested for congenital infection and chromosomal abnormalities. Infants/fetuses with microcephaly and/or CNS defects (cases) were classified into broad etiologic categories (teratogenic, genetic, multifactorial, and unknown). Cases classified as potentially attributable to congenital ZIKV infection were stratified by strength of evidence for ZIKV etiology (strong, moderate, or limited) using a novel strategy considering birth defects unique or specific to ZIKV or other infections and laboratory evidence.
Among 858 reported cases with sufficient information supporting a diagnosis of microcephaly or CNS defects, 503 were classified as potentially attributable to congenital ZIKV infection. Of these, the strength of evidence was considered strong in 124 (24.7%) cases; moderate in 232 (46.1%) cases; and limited in 147 (29.2%). Of the remaining, 355 (41.4%) were attributed to etiologies other than ZIKV infection (syphilis, toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalovirus, herpes 1 and herpes 2 viruses only, n = 32 [3.7%]; genetic, n = 16 [1.9%]; multifactorial, n = 42 [4.9%]; unknown, n = 265 [30.9%]).
Fifty-eight percent of cases of microcephaly and/or CNS defects were potentially attributable to congenital ZIKV infection; however, the strength of evidence varied considerably. This surveillance protocol might serve as a model approach for investigation and etiologic classification of complex congenital conditions.
估计哥伦比亚寨卡病毒(ZIKV)流行期间小头畸形和中枢神经系统(CNS)缺陷的患病率,以及归因于先天性 ZIKV 感染的比例。
对 2015 年至 2017 年期间国家监测报告的小头畸形和/或 CNS 缺陷病例的临床和实验室数据进行了回顾,并由一组临床专题专家进行了分类。对母体和胎儿/婴儿的生物标本进行了先天性感染和染色体异常检测。将小头畸形和/或 CNS 缺陷的婴儿/胎儿(病例)分为广泛的病因类别(致畸、遗传、多因素和未知)。将归类为可能归因于先天性 ZIKV 感染的病例根据 ZIKV 病因的证据强度(强、中或有限)进行分层,采用一种新策略,考虑到 ZIKV 或其他感染特有的或特定的出生缺陷以及实验室证据。
在 858 例报告病例中,有足够信息支持小头畸形或 CNS 缺陷的诊断,其中 503 例归类为可能归因于先天性 ZIKV 感染。在这些病例中,证据强度被认为很强的有 124 例(24.7%);中等的有 232 例(46.1%);有限的有 147 例(29.2%)。其余的 355 例(41.4%)归因于 ZIKV 感染以外的病因(梅毒、弓形虫病、风疹、巨细胞病毒、单纯疱疹 1 型和单纯疱疹 2 型病毒,n=32 [3.7%];遗传,n=16 [1.9%];多因素,n=42 [4.9%];未知,n=265 [30.9%])。
小头畸形和/或 CNS 缺陷的 58%的病例可能归因于先天性 ZIKV 感染;然而,证据的强度差异很大。这种监测方案可以作为一种用于调查和病因分类的复杂先天性疾病的方法。