International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Feb 2019)

Clinical Importance of Placental Testing among Suspected Cases of Congenital Zika Syndrome

  • Maxim D. Seferovic,
  • Michelle Turley,
  • Gregory C. Valentine,
  • Martha Rac,
  • Eumenia C. C. Castro,
  • Angela M. Major,
  • Brianna Sanchez,
  • Catherine Eppes,
  • Magdalena Sanz-Cortes,
  • James Dunn,
  • Tiffany F. Kautz,
  • James Versalovic,
  • Kenneth L. Muldrew,
  • Timothy Stout,
  • Michael A. Belfort,
  • Gail Demmler-Harrison,
  • Kjersti M. Aagaard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20030712
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 3
p. 712

Abstract

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Contemporaneous Zika virus (ZIKV) strains can cause congenital Zika syndrome (CZS). Current ZIKV clinical laboratory testing strategies are limited and include IgM serology (which may wane 12 weeks after initial exposure) and nucleic acid testing (NAT) of maternal serum, urine, and placenta for (+) strand ZIKV RNA (which is often transient). The objectives of this study were to determine if use of additional molecular tools, such as quantitative PCR and microscopy, would add to the diagnostic value of current standard placental ZIKV testing in cases with maternal endemic exposure and indeterminate testing. ZIKV RNA was quantified from dissected sections of placental villi, chorioamnion sections, and full cross-sections of umbilical cord in all cases examined. Quantitation with high-resolution automated electrophoresis determined relative amounts of precisely verified ZIKV (74-nt amplicons). In order to localize and visualize stable and actively replicating placental ZIKV in situ, labeling of flaviviridae glycoprotein, RNA ISH against both (+) and (−) ZIKV-specific ssRNA strands, and independent histologic examination for significant pathologic changes were employed. We demonstrate that the use of these molecular tools added to the diagnostic value of placental ZIKV testing among suspected cases of congenital Zika syndrome with poorly ascribed maternal endemic exposure.

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