Статья

Congenital abnormalities associated with zika virus infection–dengue as potential co-factor? A systematic review

S. Petzold, N. Agbaria, A. Deckert, P. Dambach, V. Winkler, J. Drexler, O. Horstick, T. Jaenisch,
2021

Zika virus (ZIKV) emerged in Brazil during 2013–2014 causing an epidemic of previously unknown congenital abnormalities. The frequency of severe congenital abnormalities after maternal ZIKV infection revealed an unexplained geographic variability, especially between the Northeast and the rest of Brazil. Several reasons for this variability have been discussed. Prior immunity against Dengue virus (DENV) affecting ZIKV seems to be the most likely explanation. Here we summarise the current evidence regarding this prominent co-factor to potentially explain the geographic variability. This systematic review followed the PRISMA guidelines. The search was conducted up to May 15th, 2020, focussing on immunological interactions from Zika virus with previous Dengue virus infections as potential teratogenic effect for the foetus. Eight out of 339 screened studies reported on the association between ZIKV, prior DENV infection and microcephaly, mostly focusing on antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) as potential pathomechanism. Prior DENV infection was associated with enhancement for ZIKV infection and increased neurovirulence in one included in vitro study only. Interestingly, the seven in vivo studies exhibited a heterogeneous picture with three studies showing a protective effect of prior DENV infections and others no effect at all. According to several studies, socio-economic factors are associated with increased risk for microcephaly. Very few studies addressed the question of unexplained variability of infection-related microcephaly. Many studies focussed on ADE as mechanism without measuring microcephaly as endpoint. Interestingly, three of the included studies reported a protective effect of prior DENV infection against microcephaly. This systematic review strengthens the hypothesis that immune priming after recent DENV infection is the crucial factor for determining protection or enhancement activity. It is of high importance that the currently ongoing prospective studies include a harmonised assessment of the potential candidate co-factors. © 2021 Petzold et al.

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  • 1. Version of Record от 2021-04-27

Метаданные

Об авторах
  • S. Petzold
    Heidelberg Institute of Global Health, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany
  • N. Agbaria
    CharitéUniversitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin Institute of Health, Institute of Virology, Berlin, Germany
  • A. Deckert
    Martsinovsky Institute of Medical Parasitology, Tropical and Vector-Borne Diseases, Sechenov University, Moscow, Russian Federation
  • P. Dambach
    German Centre for Infection Research, associated partner site Charité, Berlin, Germany
  • V. Winkler
    Section Clinical Tropical Medicine, Department for Infectious Diseases, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany
  • J. Drexler
    Center for Global Health, Colorado School of Public Health, Aurora, Colorado, United States
  • O. Horstick
  • T. Jaenisch
Название журнала
  • PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Том
  • 15
Выпуск
  • 1
Страницы
  • 1-11
Ключевые слова
  • neutralizing antibody; antibody dependent enhancement; Article; dengue; Dengue virus; disease severity; enzyme linked immunosorbent assay; female; human; immune response; microcephaly; plaque reduction neutralization test; reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; virus replication; Zika fever; Zika virus
Издатель
  • Public Library of Science
Тип документа
  • journal article
Тип лицензии Creative Commons
  • CC
Правовой статус документа
  • Свободная лицензия
Источник
  • scopus