Symptomatic infant characteristics of congenital cytomegalovirus disease in Australia.
Cuvinte cheie
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Human cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most common cause of viral intrauterine infection. In utero transmission can occur during primary maternal infection, reactivation or reinfection of seropositive mothers.
OBJECTIVE
To describe the aetiology and clinical features of infants diagnosed with congenital CMV and to document maternal factors that were presented.
METHODS
Active national surveillance was initiated in 1999 in collaboration with the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit.
RESULTS
Monthly notifications resulted in 70 cases of congenital CMV being identified between 1999 and 2003. Nearly all of the cases were symptomatic with the most common clinical sequelae reported in infected infants being jaundice, thrombocytopaenia, hepatomegaly, petechiae, purpura and splenomegaly. Almost half (43.5%) of the infants had central nervous system (CNS) complications, such as microcephaly, chorioretinitis, sensorineural hearing loss, intracranial calcifications, developmental delay or seizures, with over half presenting two or more CNS abnormalities. Maternal febrile illness was noted in 54.8% of the cases. The majority of mothers were primiparous (46.4%) or secundiparous (39.3%), indicating two different population groups at risk of primary CMV infection.
CONCLUSIONS
This study documents symptomatic congenital CMV cases in Australia.