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Diagnosis of congenital CMV infection via DBS samples testing and neonatal hearing screening: an observational study in Italy

Authors :
Federica Di Berardino
Cristina Galli
Umberto Ambrosetti
Diego Zanetti
Valeria Primache
Elena Pariani
Sandro Binda
Mirko Aldè
Enrico Fagnani
Laura Pellegrinelli
Source :
BMC Infectious Diseases, BMC Infectious Diseases, Vol 19, Iss 1, Pp 1-5 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Congenital Cytomegalovirus (cCMV) is the most common cause of non-genetic hearing loss in childhood. A newborn hearing screening program (NHSP) is currently running in Italy, but no universal cCMV nor statewide hearing-targeted CMV screening programs have been implemented yet. This observational monocentric study was aimed at estimating the rate of cCMV infections identified by CMV-DNA analysis on Dried Blood Spots (DBS) samples in deaf children identified via NHSP in Northern Italy in the period spanning from 2014 to 2018. Methods Children with a confirmed diagnosis of deafness and investigated for CMV-DNA by nucleic acid extraction and in-house polymerase-chain reaction (PCR) on stored newborns screening cards (DBS-test) were included in this study. Deafness was defined by a hearing threshold ≥20 decibel (dB HL) by Auditory Brainstem Responses (ABR); all investigated DBS samples were collected within 3 days of life. Results Overall, 82 children were included (median age: 3.4 months; lower-upper quartiles: 2–5.3 months; males: 60.9%). Most of them (70.7%) presented bilateral hearing loss with a symmetrical pattern in 79.3% of the cases. ABR thresholds were ≥ 70 dB HL (severe/profound deafness) in 46.5% of children. Among all tested children, 6.1% resulted positive for cCMV. The rate of severe/profound deafness was statistically higher in children with cCMV infection. Conclusions The addition of DBS-test to the NHSP allowed the identification, in their first months of life, of a cCMV infection in 6.1% of children who had failed NHS. The introduction of a targeted CMV screening strategy could help clinicians in the differential diagnosis and in the babies’ management. DBS samples can be considered a “universal newborns biobank”: their storage site and duration should be the subject of political decision-making.

Details

ISSN :
14712334
Volume :
19
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC infectious diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c05a29f398e0181f67675f218ee5a1f