Characteristics, risk factors, and outcomes related to Zika virus infection during pregnancy in Northeastern Thailand: A prospective pregnancy cohort study, 2018–2020
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Published:2024-05-17
Issue:5
Volume:18
Page:e0012176
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ISSN:1935-2735
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Container-title:PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases
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language:en
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Short-container-title:PLoS Negl Trop Dis
Author:
Wongsawat JuraiORCID, Thamthitiwat Somsak, Hicks Victoria J., Uttayamakul Sumonmal, Teepruksa Phanthaneeya, Sawatwong Pongpun, Skaggs Beth, Mock Philip A., MacArthur John R., Suya Inthira, Sapchookul Patranuch, Kitsutani Paul, Lo Terrence Q., Vachiraphan Apichart, Kovavisarach Ekachai, Rhee Chulwoo, Darun Pamorn, Saepueng Kamol, Waisaen Chamnan, Jampan Doungporn, Sriboonrat Pravit, Palanuwong Buncha, Sukbut Punchawee, Areechokchai Darin, Pittayawonganon Chakrarat, Iamsirithaworn Sopon, Bloss Emily, Rao Carol Y.
Abstract
Background
In response to the 2015–2016 Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak and the causal relationship established between maternal ZIKV infection and adverse infant outcomes, we conducted a cohort study to estimate the incidence of ZIKV infection in pregnancy and assess its impacts in women and infants.
Methodology/Principal findings
From May 2018-January 2020, we prospectively followed pregnant women recruited from 134 participating hospitals in two non-adjacent provinces in northeastern Thailand. We collected demographic, clinical, and epidemiologic data and blood and urine at routine antenatal care visits until delivery. ZIKV infections were confirmed by real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (rRT-PCR). Specimens with confirmed ZIKV underwent whole genome sequencing.
Among 3,312 women enrolled, 12 (0.36%) had ZIKV infections, of which two (17%) were detected at enrollment. Ten (83%, 3 in 2nd and 7 in 3rd trimester) ZIKV infections were detected during study follow-up, resulting in an infection rate of 0.15 per 1,000 person-weeks (95% CI: 0.07–0.28). The majority (11/12, 91.7%) of infections occurred in one province. Persistent ZIKV viremia (42 days) was found in only one woman. Six women with confirmed ZIKV infections were asymptomatic until delivery. Sequencing of 8 ZIKV isolates revealed all were of Asian lineage. All 12 ZIKV infected women gave birth to live, full-term infants; the only observed adverse birth outcome was low birth weight in one (8%) infant. Pregnancies in 3,300 ZIKV-rRT-PCR-negative women were complicated by 101 (3%) fetal deaths, of which 67 (66%) had miscarriages and 34 (34%) had stillbirths. There were no differences between adverse fetal or birth outcomes of live infants born to ZIKV-rRT-PCR-positive mothers compared to live infants born to ZIKV-rRT-PCR-negative mothers.
Conclusions/Significance
Confirmed ZIKV infections occurred infrequently in this large pregnancy cohort and observed adverse maternal and birth outcomes did not differ between mothers with and without confirmed infections.
Funder
United States Agency for International Development Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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