1 / 49

Neil S. Silverman, M.D. Clinical Professor, Obstetrics and Gynecology

Zika Update: What We’ve Learned So Far ACOG District XII Annual District Meeting Orlando, FL: August 11, 2017. Neil S. Silverman, M.D. Clinical Professor, Obstetrics and Gynecology Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Member, ACOG Zika Expert Work Group.

esterling
Télécharger la présentation

Neil S. Silverman, M.D. Clinical Professor, Obstetrics and Gynecology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Zika Update: What We’ve Learned So FarACOG District XII Annual District MeetingOrlando, FL: August 11, 2017 Neil S. Silverman, M.D.Clinical Professor, Obstetrics and Gynecology Division of Maternal-Fetal MedicineDavid Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Member, ACOG Zika Expert Work Group

  2. Aedesaegypti

  3. Zika – Disease and Risks

  4. Background • Zika virus is an arbovirus transmitted to humans primarily through the bite of infected Aedes sp. mosquito • Nearly all Zika outbreaks due to aegypti & albopictus • These are the same mosquitoes that transmit dengue and chikungunya • Dengue and Zika are flaviviruses (YF) ; chikungunya: alphavirus • West Nile also arbovirus/flavivirus, but spread by Culex sp. • The mosquito vectors typically breed in domestic water-holding containers • Aegypti -- high “vectorial capacity”: feeds primarily on humans, multiple humans in a single meal, lives close to humans , also daytime and nighttime feeders

  5. Clinical Disease • About 20% of people infected with Zika virus become symptomatic • Among those with clinical illness • Symptoms mild, typically develop within 1 week from exposure, lasting several days to a week • Characteristic clinical findings: acute onset of fever, maculopapular rash, arthralgia, or conjunctivitis. • Severe disease requiring hospitalization is uncommon and fatalities are rare. • Guillain-Barré syndrome also has been reported at increased rates in patients following Zika infection

  6. Brasil P et al. N Engl J Med 2016. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1602412 Clinical Features of Zika Virus Infection in Pregnant Women.

  7. Brazil Zika Outbreak May 2015: First infection in Brazil October 2015: increase in microcephaly

  8. Microcephaly: the tip of the iceberg? • Microcephaly is a very specific diagnosis, and typically unusual as an isolated finding: initially seen in newborns • On ultrasound, defined as HC < 3 SD for GA (SMFM, 2016)* • HC < 2 SDfor GA should trigger more detailed eval and f/u • Microcephaly became an early trigger to search for Zika association, but spectrum of disease became apparent • Microcephaly can occur as a result of a fetal brain disruption sequence: this appears to be pathology of Zika infection * ref: Chervenak FA, et al, AJOG 1984

  9. ZikaAssociatedPregnancy Outcomes • Fetal loss/miscarriage, stillbirth • Fetal growth abnormalities • Fetal brain anomalies • Microcephaly • Ventriculomegaly • Intracranial calcifications • Eye abnormalities • Neurologic • Hypertonia • Arthrogryposis • Seizures Miranda-Filho et al, AJPH April 2016, Vol 106 No. 4

  10. Long Term Pregnancy Outcomes: Evolving • Update on 13 infants born without microcephaly but ZKV-infected (Brazil) • Neuroimaging abnormal in all: all w/ ↓ brain volume, +/or ↑ vents • 11 referred for small head size but > 2SD, 2 for devel. lag (5, 7 mos) • 10 w/dysphagia, 3 w/chorioretinitis, all hypertonic (MMWR 11/16) • Recent Brazil cohort Zin AA, et al. JAMA Pediatrics 7/17/17 • 112 mother-infant pairs w/confirmed maternal infx • 64% of infants Zika (+), 21% of those with eye abnl • 10/24 with eye findings (42%) did not have microcephaly, while 8 (33%) had no CNS findings • Anticipate a spectrum of outcomes? • Developmental and/or intellectual delay • Motor abnormalities

  11. Pregnancy Risk Estimates • Brasil et al: Rio cohort1 • Prospective study cohort of134 symptomatic pregnant women with confirmed ZKV infection • Overall, 49/117 (42%) liveborn ZKV-exposed infants had abnormal findings by 1st month of life [5% in ZKV(-): p< 0.001] • Adverse outcomes seen regardless of trimester of infx • 55% risk if maternal infx in 1st, 52% if in 2nd, 29% if in 3rd • Updated report from US Zika Pregnancy Registry2 • Birth defects related to Zika in 6%, 21 in live births • No risk difference regarding sx; 11% risk if exposure in 1st∆ • Data from US territories: 5% of fetuses/newborns affected (MMWR 6/18/17) • Outcomes from 2624 at-risk pregnancies, 1/16 through 4/17 1. Brasil et al, NEJM 12/16. 2. Honein M et al, JAMA 12/13/16

  12. Zika – Where is it and where is it not?

  13. As of July 2017: CDC.gov

  14. Zika in the US: as of Aug 9, 2017 US States/DC (5413 cases): 200 in 2017 • Travel-associated Zika virus disease cases reported: 5140 (49 other routes) • Locally acquired vector-borne cases reported: 224 • In 2017: all travel cases so far , exc 1 local and 1 sexual US Territories • Travel-associated cases reported: 147 (0 in 2017) • Locally acquired cases reported: 37007 (including 553 so far in 2017) • 51 cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome CDC.gov

  15. Current Zika Statistics (as of 7/25/17) • 2086 pregnant travelers with laboratory evidence of Zika virus in US States and DC – vast majority imported/travel-related • 1784 completed pregnancies • 91 reported liveborn infants and 8 fetal losses with Zika related birth defects • 4341 pregnant cases in US territories (mostly Puerto Rico) --- 3051 completed, 128 affected liveborns

  16. Local Zika Transmission in FLA, TX • Pregnant women had been counseled to avoid travel to or sexual contact with those who traveled to Miami-Dade, FLA and Brownsville, TX • After 8/1/16 for Miami-Dade; 10/29/16 for TX • Travel restrictions lifted June 2, 2017 for Miami-Dade – still cautionary for south Texas • New local case (1st US for 2017) in S Texas (7/24) • 1st sexual transmission case in FLA 8/1/17 (Pinellas) • Biggest risk in U.S. still remains travel exposure

  17. Through Aug 9, 2017

  18. Gulf Coast States: Zika’s Potential Economic Risks • Recent study reports on economic model to estimate Zika-related costs in 6 Gulf-area states • ALA, FLA, GA, LA, MISS • Modeled for a 230-day outbreak, based on Brazil duration • Cost estimates based on both direct medical costs and productivity losses due to illness or adverse outcomes (including poor pregnancy outcomes) • Model included Medicaid and commercial costs, screening tests and, for pregnancy, ultrasound surveillance • Modeled for Zika attack rates from 0.1% to 10% • Even an attack rate of 1% (far lower than rates seen in French Polynesia/Micronesia outbreaks) resulted in total economic impact of $1.2 billion Lee BY, et al. PLOS Negl Trop Dis, 4/27/17

  19. Zika – Education and Testing

  20. What do we tell our pregnant patients? • How much fetal risk with confirmed maternal infection? • Based on current data, range may be as high as 29% • Rates are derived from methodologically diverse studies • Despite earlier reports, recent data suggest later GA at infection does not exclude potential adverse impact • Pregnant women should not travel to areas with active Zika transmission

  21. The role of prevention • If in an area with transmission, protection and prevention strategies are important – and repellent for 3 weeks after return from these areas • DEET, picaridin fine for use in pregnancy • Consumer Reports (Sept 2017): Deet at 15-30% concentrations works best, picardin 20% (spray, not lotion), oil of lemon eucalyptus 30% (Repel better than Coleman) • Review article on repellents in Zika era: Wylie B, et al. ObGyn 11/16

  22. What informed the new testing guidelines? • While consequences of Zika infection are better understood, accurate diagnosis continues to be challenging • Virus present in body fluids only transiently • Serologic testing (IgM) can’t always reliably time infection • Serology prone to false-positive results and cross-reaction with other flaviviruses • With declining prevalence of Zika infection, probability of false-positive tests increases • Changing epidemiology further limits diagnostic capabilities of existing tests

  23. Persistence of NAT and Immune Responses • Early data: Zika RNA detected up to 7 days after symptoms • Zika Persistence Study (ZiPer: NEJM, 2017*) of persons with NAT-confirmed infection reported detection 8-15 days after sx in 36%, 16-30 days in 21%, > 60 days in 4% • Some series have shown extended viral persistence in pregnancy • Viral detection may exist longer in urine than in blood • Zika IgM: typically detected with 1st 2 wks after symptoms • Published data limited but ZiPer Study showed IgM (+) after sx after 0-7 days in 34%, 8-15 days in 100%, > 60 days in 80% • Median of 4 months (8-210 days) to 1st negative IgM result • Detection of IgM antibodies might not indicate infection in current pregnancy *Paz-Bailey G, et al. NEJM 2017: doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1613108

  24. Zika Immunity • Presumption has been that Zika infection confers immunity after the IgM response • Based on experience with other flaviviruses, previous Zika infection is likely to confer prolonged, likely lifelong immunity • If true, prior infection would prevent risks for a future pregnancy • However, no commercially-available IgG testing exists, and IgM duration limited • New tests on the horizon .. NS1-based

  25. New guidelines – what do the changes reflect? As many areas in the Americas move into a 2nd or 3rd mosquito season after introduction of Zika virus, testing becomes more complex Given the evolving epidemiology and the better-realized limitations of testing, updated testing algorithms for symptomatic and asymptomatic pregnant women emphasize a shared decision-making model Pre-and post-test counseling, with results interpreted in context of limitations

  26. New guidelines: what’s the same (mostly)? • Screen pregnant women for Zika exposure risk and/or symptoms at every prenatal and hospital visit • Knowledge of potential exposure before and during pregnancy is critical information for test interpretation • Symptomatic pregnant women with recent possible Zika exposure: testing still recommended • Concurrent NAT (blood/urine) and IgM as soon as possible, through 12 weeks post-exposure (can consider if > 12 wks, but..) • Pregnant women with exposure and u/s findings: still test • Asymptomatic women with ongoing possible Zika exposure: testing still offered once/trimester • NAT testing of blood and urine, not IgM (diagnostic limits)

  27. New guidelines: what’s different (mostly) • Asymptomatic women with recent possible Zika exposure but not ongoing exposure • Testing now not routinely recommended for this group • BUT: shared-decision making and consideration of local/regional epidemiologic risks involved for this group • CDC acknowledges that data indicate that while perinatal Zika risk doesn’t differ by maternal symptoms, routine testing in a low-prevalence group increases risk of false-positives in absence of any prevention or therapies • If testing done, default to algorithm for symptomatic/no ongoing exposure: PCR and IgM • Currently: CA, FL, TX staying with prior guidelines

  28. Confirmed Zika Cases in Mexico by State January 1, 2016 – August 8, 2016 0 confirmed cases 1 – 25 confirmed cases 26 – 50 confirmed cases Sonora Baja California 51 – 100 confirmed cases Chihuahua Coahuila More than 100 confirmed cases Baja California Sur Nuevo León Sinaloa Durango Tamaulipas Zacatecas San Luis Potosi N = 1,490 Ag. Nayarit Yucatán Guanajuato Quer. Quintana Roo Jalisco Hidalgo México Tl. Veracruz Campeche DF Michoacán Puebla Tabasco Colima Guerrero Chiapas Oaxaca Data provided by the Mexican Ministry of Health http://www.epidemiologia.salud.gob.mx/doctos/avisos/2016/zika/DGE_ZIKA_CASOS_SEM028_2016.pdf Ag. = Aguascalientes Quer. = Querétaro DF = Distrito Federal Tl. = Tlaxcala Morelos

  29. Confirmed Zika Cases in Mexico by State January 1, 2016 – July 3, 2017 0 confirmed cases 1 – 25 confirmed cases 26 – 50 confirmed cases Sonora Baja California 51 – 100 confirmed cases Chihuahua Coahuila More than 100 confirmed cases Baja California Sur Nuevo León Sinaloa Durango Tamaulipas Zacatecas San Luis Potosi Ag. Nayarit Yucatán Guanajuato Quer. Quintana Roo Hidalgo Jalisco Campeche México Tl. Veracruz DF Michoacán Puebla Tabasco Colima Guerrero Oaxaca Chiapas Data provided by the Mexican Ministry of Health https://www.gob.mx/cms/uploads/attachment/file/223168/Cuadro_Casos_ZIKA_y_Emb_SE26_2017.pdf Ag. = Aguascalientes Quer. = Querétaro DF = Distrito Federal Tl. = Tlaxcala Morelos

  30. Sexual Partner concerns/guidelines • Sexual transmission of Zika virus can occur • Male/female, female/male, male/male all reported • Pregnant women whose male partners at risk for Zika virus infection should consider using condoms or abstaining from sexual intercourse – duration of pregnancy – Zika in semen up to 6 mos. • Zika has recently been shown to cause testicular damage in mouse models (Govero J, et al. Lancet Dec 15, 2016) • ZKV persistence in testis/epididymis→ tissue injury resulting in diminished testosterone and inhibin B levels and oligospermia

  31. Zika “waiting periods” – counseling for OBGYNs • Timeframes to wait to get pregnant after travel to an area with a CDC travel notice (CDC 7/17) • Women -- 8 weeks Men -- 6 months • If both partners traveled, wait 6 months + condoms • Egg and sperm donors (ASRM, 3/16) • Wait period 6 months after infx, travel, or contact • Blood donors (FDA, 2/16) • 4 week waiting period

  32. Zika Resources • CDC Zika website: www.cdc.gov/zika • ACOG’s Zika webpage: www.acog.org/zika • Florida • www.floridahealth.gov/diseases-and-conditions/zika-virus

  33. Neonatal coordination is Critical!

  34. Which newborns need Zika surveillance? • Zika testing for in 1st two days after birth for infants at risk: serum and urine for PCR, serum for IgM • Mothers with lab-confirmed infection • Abnormal clinical findings suggestive of congenital Zika and potential maternal epidemiologic link, regardless of maternal test results • All infants born to women with lab-confirmed Zika infection should get: • Zika testing, comprehensive exam, head ultrasound, and standard hearing assessment • Based on newer data, they should also get formal eye exam (not just red reflex testing)

  35. Need for Neonatal Followup & Deficits • Recent report on 2549 completed pregnancies (1/16-4/17) • 5% of fetuses/newborns of women in Puerto Rico with confirmed Zika infection had likely Zika-associated birth defects 1 • Of liveborns without birth defects, only 52% had postnatal neuroimaging and 78% had hearing screens • Recent US Pregnancy Registry Data worse (MMWR, 4/7/17) 2 • Among 895 liveborns with maternal infection: postnatal neuroimaging reported for 25%, Zika testing of at least 1 infant specimen 65% • While 98% of pregnant women in P.R. in a recent survey took at least 1 measure to avoid Zika infection, use of repellents (45%) and condoms (40%) during pregnancy overall low 3 1. Shapiro-Mendoza CK, et al, MMWR 6/8/17. 2. Reynolds M et al, MMWR 4/7/17. 3. D’Angelo DV et al, MMWR 6/9/17

  36. Zika as an Endemic Infection • Zika virus is considered endemic in some countries, and a large number of local residents are likely to be immune. However, US travelers to endemic areas may not be immune to Zika virus and infections have occurred among travelers to Asia and Africa Updated 7/17

  37. Aug 4, 2016

  38. Plasmid-based vaccine: no live or attenuated virus 2500 study enrollees planned in high-risk areas to test both immunogenicity and efficacy No pregnant women to be enrolled

More Related