Recognition, treatment, and sequelae of congenital cytomegalovirus in Australia: An observational study
3
Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Sydney Children's Hospital, Randwick, Australia.
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2018-11-01
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR: 1.193
CiteScore: 9.1
Impact factor: 3.4
ISSN: 13866532, 18735967
PubMed ID:
30300787
Infectious Diseases
Virology
Abstract
Australian national surveillance data was used to assess recognition, sequelae, and antiviral therapy for congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) cases.Data from congenital CMV cases reported through the Australian Paediatric Surveillance Unit born January 1999 to December 2016 were described and Chi-square tests used to characterise trends and associations in case reporting, maternal CMV serology testing, and antiviral therapy. Descriptive analyses for hearing loss and developmental delay were reported for cases born ≥2004, following introduction of universal neonatal hearing screening.There were 302 congenital CMV cases (214 symptomatic, 88 asymptomatic). Congenital CMV was suspected in 70.6% by 30 days of age, with no differences across birth cohorts. Maternal CMV serology testing was associated with maternal illness during pregnancy but not birth cohort. There was increasing antiviral use for symptomatic cases, being used in 14% born 1999-2004, 19.6% born 2005-2010, and 44.4% born 2011-2016 (p < 0.001). For those born ≥2004, hearing loss was reported in 42.1% of symptomatic and 26.6% of asymptomatic cases; while developmental delay was reported in 16.9% of symptomatic and 1.3% of asymptomatic cases.There appears to be under-reporting and under-recognition of congenital CMV despite increasing use of antiviral therapy. Universal newborn CMV screening should be considered to facilitate follow-up of affected children and targeted linkage into hearing and developmental services, and to provide population-level infant CMV epidemiology to support research and evaluation of antiviral and adjunctive therapies.
Found
Nothing found, try to update filter.
Found
Nothing found, try to update filter.
Top-30
Journals
|
1
2
|
|
|
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health
2 publications, 8.33%
|
|
|
Communicable Diseases Intelligence
2 publications, 8.33%
|
|
|
Reviews in Medical Virology
2 publications, 8.33%
|
|
|
Pediatrics
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Medicine (United States)
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
International Journal of Neonatal Screening
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
The Lancet Infectious Diseases
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Prenatal Diagnosis
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Birth Defects Research
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Current Medical Research and Opinion
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
BMJ Paediatrics Open
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Proceedings of the Latvian Academy of Sciences, Section B: Natural, Exact, and Applied Sciences
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Case Reports in Pediatrics
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Frontiers in Pediatrics
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Journal of International Medical Research
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Clinical Therapeutics
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Children
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Medical Journal of Australia
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Pediatric Research
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
1
2
|
Publishers
|
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
|
|
|
Wiley
7 publications, 29.17%
|
|
|
Elsevier
3 publications, 12.5%
|
|
|
MDPI
2 publications, 8.33%
|
|
|
Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care
2 publications, 8.33%
|
|
|
Springer Nature
2 publications, 8.33%
|
|
|
American Academy of Pediatrics
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Taylor & Francis
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
BMJ
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Walter de Gruyter
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Hindawi Limited
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
Frontiers Media S.A.
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
SAGE
1 publication, 4.17%
|
|
|
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
|
- We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
- Statistics recalculated weekly.
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Metrics
24
Total citations:
24
Citations from 2024:
8
(33.34%)
Cite this
GOST |
RIS |
BibTex
Cite this
GOST
Copy
Bartlett A. W. et al. Recognition, treatment, and sequelae of congenital cytomegalovirus in Australia: An observational study // Journal of Clinical Virology. 2018. Vol. 108. pp. 121-125.
GOST all authors (up to 50)
Copy
Hall B. M., Palasanthiran P., McMullan B. J., Rawlinson W. Recognition, treatment, and sequelae of congenital cytomegalovirus in Australia: An observational study // Journal of Clinical Virology. 2018. Vol. 108. pp. 121-125.
Cite this
RIS
Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1016/j.jcv.2018.09.017
UR - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcv.2018.09.017
TI - Recognition, treatment, and sequelae of congenital cytomegalovirus in Australia: An observational study
T2 - Journal of Clinical Virology
AU - Hall, Beverley M
AU - Palasanthiran, Pamela
AU - McMullan, Brendan J.
AU - Rawlinson, W.
PY - 2018
DA - 2018/11/01
PB - Elsevier
SP - 121-125
VL - 108
PMID - 30300787
SN - 1386-6532
SN - 1873-5967
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
Copy
@article{2018_Bartlett,
author = {Beverley M Hall and Pamela Palasanthiran and Brendan J. McMullan and W. Rawlinson},
title = {Recognition, treatment, and sequelae of congenital cytomegalovirus in Australia: An observational study},
journal = {Journal of Clinical Virology},
year = {2018},
volume = {108},
publisher = {Elsevier},
month = {nov},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcv.2018.09.017},
pages = {121--125},
doi = {10.1016/j.jcv.2018.09.017}
}