CMV in pregnancy

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Revision as of 17:45, 15 August 2020 by Aidan (talk | contribs) (: added risk by trimester)

Background

  • Infection with cytomegalovirus during pregnancy
  • Infection can be primary infection, non-primary reinfection with another strain, or non-primary reactivation of latent virus
  • Mainly of concern because of the risk of causing congenital CMV

Epidemiology

  • Maternal seroconversion in about 2% of pregnancies
    • Higher in childcare workers
  • Affects about 1 in 200 live births in US
  • Risk of transmission to fetus is highest with maternal primary infection, and much lower for non-primary infection
    • Primary infection: 30% risk of congenital CMV
    • Non-primary:
      • Reinfection: 5% risk
      • Reactivation: 1% risk
  • Risk of transmission to fetus following primary infection increases with gestational age, but risk of neurological sequelae decreases substantially1
Trimester Transmission to Fetus Severity of Neurological Disease
Severe Mild/Transient None
First 30% 5% 30% 65%
Second 40% 0% 15% 85%
Third 70% 0% 0% 100%

Diagnosis

  • Serology with IgM and IgG
    • IgM usually positive for 6 weeks after primary infection, but can remain positive for as long as 12 months
    • IgM has false positives, including from rheumatoid factor, EBV infection, lupus
IgG IgM Avidity Interpretation
+ N/A past infection, low risk for congenital infection
+ + high past infection, low risk for congenital infection
+ + low primary maternal infection within the past 3 months
N/A either no infection, or repeat in 4 weeks
  • Fetal infection is confirmed by amniocentesis sent for PCR
    • To minimized the risk of a false-negative result, it should be be done after 17 weeks gestation and at least 7 weeks after maternal infection

Management

  • Counsel mother on risk of fetal infection and subsequent development of congenital CMV
  • If they would terminate if CMV-positive due to those risks, then proceed with amniocentesis to diagnose

References

  1. ^  Gisela Enders, Anja Daiminger, Ursula Bäder, Simone Exler, Martin Enders. Intrauterine transmission and clinical outcome of 248 pregnancies with primary cytomegalovirus infection in relation to gestational age. Journal of Clinical Virology. 2011;52(3):244-246. doi:10.1016/j.jcv.2011.07.005.