# Is Neonatal Viremia a Possible Predictor of the Timing of Maternal Infection in Asymptomatic Congenital Cytomegalovirus Infection? A Retrospective Study

**Authors:** Fabio Natale, Giovanni Boscarino, Giuseppina Liuzzi, Fabrizia Bonci, Giuseppe Maria Albanese, Raffaella Cellitti, Antonella Giancotti, Francesco Franco, Barbara Caravale, Rosaria Turchetta, Ombretta Turriziani, Maria Giulia Conti, Gianluca Terrin

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jpm15050165 · 2025-04-24

## TL;DR

This study explores whether neonatal viremia can predict when a mother was infected with CMV during pregnancy in asymptomatic congenital cases.

## Contribution

The study evaluates neonatal viremia as a potential predictor of the timing of maternal CMV infection in asymptomatic congenital cases.

## Key findings

- Neonatal plasma viral loads were significantly higher in first-trimester infections compared to third-trimester ones.
- There was an inverse correlation between neonatal viral loads and gestational age at birth.
- Neonatal viremia values overlapped too much to reliably predict the timing of maternal infection.

## Abstract

Background: Asymptomatic congenital cytomegalovirus (acCMV) infections represent 85–90% of all congenital CMV infection. The incidence of late-onset sequelae in these cases significantly contribute to the burden of CMV disease. The timing of maternal infection (TMI) has been identified as the main predictor of late-onset sequelae in acCMV infants, and follow-up programs in Europe are currently calibrated according to the TMI. Our aim was to evaluate neonatal viremia as a possible predictor of the TMI in acCMV infections. Methods: Plasma viral loads (PVLs) were assessed in the first month of life in a population of acCMV-infected newborns delivered by women who suffer a primary CMV infection during pregnancy. TMI was assigned to a trimester of pregnancy according to the maternal serological screening. PVLs were evaluated in relation to the TMI and gestational age (GA) at birth. Results: One hundred and ten newborns were, respectively, assigned to preconceptional (6.4%), 1st (27.3%), 2nd (38.2%), and 3rd (28.2%) trimester infections. Median neonatal PVLs values were significantly different between groups (p < 0.001). First-trimester infections exhibited significantly higher PVLs when compared with third-trimester ones (p < 0.001). Overall, PVLs showed an inverse correlation with GA at birth (p = 0.003). Conclusions: Median neonatal PVLs are significantly higher in 1st trimester infections if compared with 3rd trimester ones, but a wide overlap between PVL values prevent their possible use as a predictor of the TMI. In our population, a significant inverse relationship, mainly dependent on 1st and 2nd trimester infections, is demonstrated between PVLs and GA. Overall, fetal viremia is already decreasing weeks before the term of pregnancy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** congenital cytomegalovirus (MONDO:0017409)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CMV disease (MESH:D003586), Maternal Infection (MESH:D007239), Neonatal Viremia (MESH:D014766)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12113359/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12113359