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Pre and postnatal exposure to Chikungunya virus does not affect child neurodevelopmental outcomes at two years of age

Pre and postnatal exposure to Chikungunya virus does not affect child neurodevelopmental outcomes at two years of age
Pre and postnatal exposure to Chikungunya virus does not affect child neurodevelopmental outcomes at two years of age
Background: The 2005–06 chikungunya virus (CHIKV) outbreak in La Réunion suggested that mothers could transmit CHIKV to their neonates while viremic during the intrapartum period, and more than half of the infected neonates showed impaired neurodevelopment at two years of age. However, data sparsity precluded an overview of the developmental impact of vertical infection within the whole prenatal period. Objective & methods: current study assessed two-year old children born to mothers who were infected during the 2014 CHIKV outbreak in Grenada to determine the neurodevelopmental impact of perinatal CHIKV infection throughout gestation. Mother and child infection status were confirmed by serologic testing (IgG and IgM) for CHIKV. Cognitive, fine motor, gross motor, language and behavioral outcomes were assessed at two years of age on the INTERGROWTH-21st Neurodevelopment Assessment (INTER-NDA). Results: No differences in neurodevelopmental outcomes were observed between two-year-old children born to mothers infected with CHIKV during gestation (n = 149) and those born to mothers not infected with CHIKV (n = 161). No differences were found in INTER-NDA scores between children infected with CHIKV (n = 47) and children not infected with CHIKV (n = 592). Likewise, there were no differences between children infected with CHIKV post-partum (n = 19) versus children not infected with CHIKV (n = 592). Conclusion: Our findings suggest that children exposed and/or infected with CHIKV outside of the intrapartum period experience no significant neurodevelopmental delay at two years of age, as measured by the INTER-NDA, compared to their unexposed and/or uninfected peers. These results complement those of previous studies which showed a neurodevelopmental risk only for children infected during the intrapartum period, while the mother was highly viremic. These results might be reassuring for women of childbearing age and public health officials in CHIKV-endemic regions.
1935-2727
Waechter, Randall
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Ingraham, Erinique
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Evans, Roberta
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Cudjoe, Nikita
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Krystosik, Amy
8786f4a5-afb3-49d3-bd99-74126a48272c
Isaac, Rashida
d0498008-ca07-45c2-b867-0e0ecc2a5895
Watts, Ashlee
ad0653a3-45f7-4ca9-8797-f125595ed0ae
Noël, Trevor
bb87426c-b75e-4fc2-b8d2-f51f514cb89a
Landon, Barbara
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Fernandes, Michelle
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Mapp-Alexander, Veronica
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Suresh, Priyanka
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Mitchell, George
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Macpherson, Calum
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Gérardin, Patrick
aca10c51-acdf-42b9-9da7-c1f541d88606
LaBeaud, A. Desiree
8acb0cf1-373c-4505-8e31-5b251b62dc66
Waechter, Randall
81829a45-28bb-40b7-89b3-2d2b0fbc1bd2
Ingraham, Erinique
507f2193-6105-43f4-96bc-b5446a84de35
Evans, Roberta
46ef2188-d0e1-447f-84ef-f79ac0208165
Cudjoe, Nikita
39f0c11f-0d63-422a-ad43-67c7845fcfd4
Krystosik, Amy
8786f4a5-afb3-49d3-bd99-74126a48272c
Isaac, Rashida
d0498008-ca07-45c2-b867-0e0ecc2a5895
Watts, Ashlee
ad0653a3-45f7-4ca9-8797-f125595ed0ae
Noël, Trevor
bb87426c-b75e-4fc2-b8d2-f51f514cb89a
Landon, Barbara
74e43664-4060-4495-b4ef-a1992a5b9879
Fernandes, Michelle
16d62e60-ae8e-455f-88d3-88e778253b4a
Mapp-Alexander, Veronica
cefef753-e53a-400e-a823-42596579129e
Suresh, Priyanka
94481b1e-3763-4a2d-add8-25d9e16a598e
Mitchell, George
61a9dd68-032f-4b19-9a4b-516679091fc8
Macpherson, Calum
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Gérardin, Patrick
aca10c51-acdf-42b9-9da7-c1f541d88606
LaBeaud, A. Desiree
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Waechter, Randall, Ingraham, Erinique, Evans, Roberta, Cudjoe, Nikita, Krystosik, Amy, Isaac, Rashida, Watts, Ashlee, Noël, Trevor, Landon, Barbara, Fernandes, Michelle, Mapp-Alexander, Veronica, Suresh, Priyanka, Mitchell, George, Macpherson, Calum, Gérardin, Patrick and LaBeaud, A. Desiree (2020) Pre and postnatal exposure to Chikungunya virus does not affect child neurodevelopmental outcomes at two years of age. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 14 (10). (doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0008546).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: The 2005–06 chikungunya virus (CHIKV) outbreak in La Réunion suggested that mothers could transmit CHIKV to their neonates while viremic during the intrapartum period, and more than half of the infected neonates showed impaired neurodevelopment at two years of age. However, data sparsity precluded an overview of the developmental impact of vertical infection within the whole prenatal period. Objective & methods: current study assessed two-year old children born to mothers who were infected during the 2014 CHIKV outbreak in Grenada to determine the neurodevelopmental impact of perinatal CHIKV infection throughout gestation. Mother and child infection status were confirmed by serologic testing (IgG and IgM) for CHIKV. Cognitive, fine motor, gross motor, language and behavioral outcomes were assessed at two years of age on the INTERGROWTH-21st Neurodevelopment Assessment (INTER-NDA). Results: No differences in neurodevelopmental outcomes were observed between two-year-old children born to mothers infected with CHIKV during gestation (n = 149) and those born to mothers not infected with CHIKV (n = 161). No differences were found in INTER-NDA scores between children infected with CHIKV (n = 47) and children not infected with CHIKV (n = 592). Likewise, there were no differences between children infected with CHIKV post-partum (n = 19) versus children not infected with CHIKV (n = 592). Conclusion: Our findings suggest that children exposed and/or infected with CHIKV outside of the intrapartum period experience no significant neurodevelopmental delay at two years of age, as measured by the INTER-NDA, compared to their unexposed and/or uninfected peers. These results complement those of previous studies which showed a neurodevelopmental risk only for children infected during the intrapartum period, while the mother was highly viremic. These results might be reassuring for women of childbearing age and public health officials in CHIKV-endemic regions.

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More information

Published date: 5 October 2020
Additional Information: © 2020 Waechter et al.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 467961
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/467961
ISSN: 1935-2727
PURE UUID: c3c8a6b4-b529-4761-abfd-bd459b5baad1
ORCID for Michelle Fernandes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0051-3389

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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2022 17:06
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:10

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Contributors

Author: Randall Waechter
Author: Erinique Ingraham
Author: Roberta Evans
Author: Nikita Cudjoe
Author: Amy Krystosik
Author: Rashida Isaac
Author: Ashlee Watts
Author: Trevor Noël
Author: Barbara Landon
Author: Michelle Fernandes ORCID iD
Author: Veronica Mapp-Alexander
Author: Priyanka Suresh
Author: George Mitchell
Author: Calum Macpherson
Author: Patrick Gérardin
Author: A. Desiree LaBeaud

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