Predictors of cochleovestibular dysfunction in children with congenital cytomegalovirus infection.

Eur J Pediatr

Department of Otolaryngology, Robert Debre Hospital, Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris (APHP), Paris University, 48 boulevard Sérurier, 75019, Paris, France.

Published: August 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to identify factors that predict hearing and vestibular impairment in children born with congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV), analyzing clinical and imaging data from pregnancy and birth for 130 subjects between March 2014 and March 2020.
  • - Results showed that 64% of the children had inner ear impairments, but factors like sex, maternal infection type, and neonatal signs didn't significantly correlate with these impairments.
  • - The key findings highlight that antenatal imaging lesions and CMV infection during the first trimester are strong predictors of inner ear problems, while infections in the second and third trimesters were less likely to lead to such issues.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: The purpose of this study is to assess the predictive factors of both hearing and vestibular impairment in congenitally cytomegalovirus-infected children (cCMV) through a multivariate analysis of clinical and imaging characteristics collected during pregnancy and at birth. This retrospective study was conducted between March 2014 and March 2020, including confirmed congenitally CMV-infected children with a complete vestibular and hearing assessment. Data concerning pregnancy, date of infection, clinical characteristics, and symptomatology at birth were collected. In total, 130 children were included, with a median age of 21 months. Eighty-three children (64%) presented with an inner ear impairment (both cochlear and vestibular impairment). Sex, modality of maternal infection (seroconversion or reactivation), pregnancy term, weight and head circumference at birth, neonatal clinical signs of infection, and treatment were not significantly correlated with inner ear impairment. However, multivariate analysis confirmed that there are two independent predictive factors of inner ear impairment: antenatal imaging lesions (OR = 8.02 [1.74; 60.27], p-value = 0.01) and infection during the first trimester (OR = 4.47 [1.21; 19.22], p-value = 0.03). Conversely, infections occurring during the second trimester were rarely associated with inner ear impairment: 4/13 (31%) in our series, with vestibular impairment alone (4/4) and no hearing loss. None of the children infected during the third trimester developed inner ear dysfunction.

Conclusion: Besides the symptomatic status of the CMV infection at birth, we found that antenatal imaging brain damage and early infection (mainly during the first trimester) constitute the two best independent predictive factors of inner ear involvement in congenitally CMV-infected children.

What Is Known: • Congenital cytomegalovirus infection is the leading infectious cause of neurological disabilities and sensorineural hearing loss in children and responsible of vestibular disorders, which are probably underestimated. • No articles have yet defined the predictive factors of the entire inner ear impairment (vestibule and cochlea).

What Is New: • The timing of the infection during pregnancy (first and second trimester, ORa=4.47) and antenatal imaging lesions (ORa=8.02) are independently predictive (in a multivariate analysis) of inner ear involvement. • The symptomatic status at birth is a poor predictor of inner ear impairment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00431-022-04495-8DOI Listing

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