Escosteguy Claudia Caminha, Medronho Renata Escosteguy, Rodrigues Renata Coelho, da Silva Lucas Dalsenter Romano, de Oliveira Bruna Andrade, Machado Fernanda Beatriz, Costa Yuri Sousa, de Carvalho Cardoso Silvia Cristina, da Cunha Antonio José Ledo Alves, Medronho Roberto de Andrade
Hospital Federal dos Servidores do Estado Serviço de Epidemiologia Rio de Janeiro (RJ) Brasil Hospital Federal dos Servidores do Estado, Serviço de Epidemiologia, Rio de Janeiro (RJ), Brasil.
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Faculdade de Medicina Serviço de Epidemiologia Rio de Janeiro (RJ) Brasil Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Faculdade de Medicina, Rio de Janeiro (RJ), Brasil.
Rev Panam Salud Publica. 2020 Nov 2;44:e151. doi: 10.26633/RPSP.2020.151. eCollection 2020.
To describe the clinical and epidemiological profile of cases with confirmed microcephaly or central nervous system (CNS) findings associated with congenital Zika virus infection and other infectious etiologies in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from November 2015 to July 2017.
A cross-sectional study was performed with 298 cases (as defined by the Ministry of Health) communicated to the Rio de Janeiro State Department of Health in the study period. Demographic, epidemiological, clinical, radiological, and laboratory variables were assessed. Descriptive bivariate and multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to determine the association between specific factors and death outcome.
The median age of mothers was 24 years; 30.9% reported fever and 64.8% reported a rash during pregnancy. The median head circumference at birth was 29 cm, and median birth weight was 2 635 g. An etiological diagnosis of congenital Zika was made in 46.0%, whereas 13.8% were diagnosed with syphilis, toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalovirus, and herpes simplex infections (STORCH), with predominance of syphilis, and 40.3% had an unspecified infectious agent. CNS findings other than microcephaly were observed in 88.3%, especially intracranial calcifications, ventriculomegaly, and brain atrophy. Overall lethality was 7.0% - 19.0% in laboratory confirmed Zika cases and 22.2% in toxoplasmosis cases. Multivariable analysis revealed birth weight as the main predictor of death.
Despite the Zika epidemic, 13.8% of the studied cases were diagnosed with STORCH. The lethality and high frequency of neurological findings beyond microcephaly reflect severe infection, with impact on families and health care system.
描述2015年11月至2017年7月在巴西里约热内卢州确诊的小头畸形或与先天性寨卡病毒感染及其他感染病因相关的中枢神经系统(CNS)病变病例的临床和流行病学特征。
对研究期间向里约热内卢州卫生部报告的298例病例(根据卫生部定义)进行横断面研究。评估人口统计学、流行病学、临床、放射学和实验室变量。采用描述性双变量和多变量逻辑回归分析来确定特定因素与死亡结局之间的关联。
母亲的中位年龄为24岁;30.9%的母亲报告在孕期有发热,64.8%报告有皮疹。出生时的中位头围为29厘米,中位出生体重为2635克。46.0%的病例被诊断为先天性寨卡病毒感染,而13.8%被诊断为梅毒、弓形虫病、风疹、巨细胞病毒和单纯疱疹感染(STORCH),以梅毒为主,40.3%的病例感染病原体未明确。88.3%的病例观察到除小头畸形外的中枢神经系统病变,尤其是颅内钙化、脑室扩大和脑萎缩。实验室确诊的寨卡病毒感染病例总体死亡率为7.0% - 19.0%,弓形虫病病例为22.2%。多变量分析显示出生体重是死亡的主要预测因素。
尽管发生了寨卡病毒疫情,但13.8%的研究病例被诊断为STORCH。小头畸形以外的神经病变的高死亡率和高发生率反映了严重感染,对家庭和医疗保健系统产生了影响。