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A large series of molecular and serological specimens to evaluate mother-to-child SARS-CoV-2 transmission: a prospective study from the Italian Obstetric Surveillance System

Authors :
Edoardo Corsi Decenti
Michele Antonio Salvatore
Alessandro Mancon
Giuseppe Portella
Arianna Rocca
Caterina Vocale
Serena Donati
Irene Alberi
Gaia Maria Anelli
Federica Baltaro
Maria Bisulli
Stefano Brusa
Ilaria Cataneo
Irene Cetin
Marianna Cuomo
Pietro Dal Rì
Lidia Di Cerbo
Alice Ferretti
Maria Rita Gismondo
Gianpaolo Grisolia
Stefania Livio
Mariavittoria Locci
Francesca Malentacchi
Federico Mecacci
Barbara Paccaloni
Maria Federica Pedna
Enrica Perrone
Lucrezia Pignatti
Martina Piras
Alessandra Primavera
Valeria Savasi
Serena Simeone
Fabrizio Taddei
Roberta Tironi
Arianna Torri
Source :
International Journal of Infectious Diseases. 126:1-9
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

To assay the presence of the SARS-CoV-2 genome in vaginal, rectal, and placental swabs among pregnant women and in newborn nasopharyngeal swabs and to investigate the immunological response and maternal antibody transfer through the umbilical cord blood and milk of unvaccinated mothers.Vaginal, rectal, and placental specimens, maternal and neonatal serum, and milk were collected from a wide cohort of pregnant Italian women with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection admitted to the hospital between February 25, 2020 and June 30, 2021. Samples were tested in selected reference laboratories according to a shared interlaboratory protocol.Among 1086 enrolled women, the SARS-CoV-2 positive rate detected in all specimens ranged from 0.7% to 8.4%. Respectively, 45.2% of maternal sera collected during pregnancy and 39.7% of those collected at birth tested positive for immunoglobulin G, whereas 50.5% tested positive among neonates. Nasopharyngeal swabs were positive in 0.8% of the newborns, and immunoglobulin G was detected in 3.0% of the milk samples. The highest immunological response was recorded within 30 days during pregnancy and within 60 days of birth and in the neonatal population.Vertical transmission should be considered a rare event; although, a good maternal immunological response and antibodies transfer throughout the umbilical cord blood was detected.

Details

ISSN :
12019712
Volume :
126
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a51e8e8f49cb9657c5ffd00f5108de51