Viruses (Apr 2021)

Persistence of Anti-ZIKV-IgG over Time Is Not a Useful Congenital Infection Marker in Infants Born to ZIKV-Infected Mothers: The NATZIG Cohort

  • Conrado Milani Coutinho,
  • Juliana Dias Crivelenti Pereira Fernandes,
  • Aparecida Yulie Yamamoto,
  • Silvia Fabiana Biason de Moura Negrini,
  • Bento Vidal de Moura Negrini,
  • Sara Reis Teixeira,
  • Fabiana Rezende Amaral,
  • Márcia Soares Freitas da Motta,
  • Adriana Aparecida Tiraboschi Bárbaro,
  • Davi Casale Aragon,
  • Magelda Montoya,
  • Eva Harris,
  • Geraldo Duarte,
  • Marisa Márcia Mussi-Pinhata,
  • for the NATZIG Cohort Study Team

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v13040711
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
p. 711

Abstract

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Confirming ZIKV congenital infection is challenging because viral RNA is infrequently detected. We compared the presence of anti-ZIKV-IgM and the persistence of anti-ZIKV-IgG antibodies over 18 months in two cohorts of infants born to ZIKV-infected mothers: Cohort one: 30 infants with typical microcephaly or major brain abnormalities (Congenital Zika Syndrome-CZS); Cohort two: 123 asymptomatic infants. Serum samples obtained within 6 months of age were tested for anti-ZIKV-IgM. Anti-ZIKV-IgG was quantified in sequential samples collected at birth, 3–6 weeks, 3, 6, 12, and 18 months. ZIKV-RNA was never detected postnatally. Anti-ZIKV-IgM antibodies were detected at least once in 15/25 (60.0%; 95%CI: 38.7–78.9) infants with CZS and in 2/115 (1.7%; 95%CI: 0.2–6.1) asymptomatic infants. Although anti-ZIKV-IgG was always positive within 3–6 weeks of age, IgG levels decreased similarly over time in both cohorts. IgG levels decreased similarly in ZIKV-IgM-positive and ZIKV-IgM-negative CZS infants. Differently from other congenital infections, IgM would fail to diagnose 40% of severely symptomatic infants, and the persistence of IgG is not a useful marker for discriminating congenital infection among infants exposed to maternal ZIKV infection.

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