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Cytomegalovirus
Georges Hobeika
Omar El Baba
• Group of infections transmitted from mother to the
fetus with similar clinical manifestations
• Toxoplasma, Rubella, Cytomegalovirus, Herpes
simplex virus
TORCH
complex
• CMV is a member of the herpes virus family. as
with rubella it is likely that the virus infects the
placenta and then the fetus.
• Fetuses with the virus are often delivered
prematurely.
• CMV is the most common viral infection of the
fetus occurring in approximately 1% of the
neonates.
Modes of
maternal
transmission
• Sexual Contact
• Organ transplant
Matenal
manifestations
• Usually asymptomatic; mononucleosis-like illness
• May cause atypical pneumonia in patients with
posttransplant immunosuppression or
chemotherapy
Neonatal
manifestations
• Hearing loss
• Hyperbilirubinemia
• Seizures
• Microcephaly
• Petechial rash
• Hydrocephalus
• “Blueberry muffin” • Mental deficiency
rash
• Hepatosplenomegaly
• Chorioretinitis
• Cerebral palsy
• Periventricular
calcifications
• Detection of the virus in the urine or saliva
• Detection is often accomplished by traditional virus
culture methods but can take several weeks to
obtain a result
Diagnosis
• Rapid culture methods using centrifugation to
enhance infectivity and monoclonal antibody to
detect early antigens in infected tissue culture can
give results in 24 hours
• PCR can be used to detect small amount of CMV
DNA in the urine
• Detection within the first three weeks after birth is
considered proof of congenital CMV infection
Treatment
• Infants less than or equal to 30 days of age should be offered
treatment as a standard of care if they have:
• symptomatic focal organ disease (severe hepatitis, severe
bone marrow suppression (anaemia, neutropenia,
thrombocytopenia), colitis or pneumonitis) or
• CNS disease (microcephaly, radiological abnormalities on
MRI or Cranial USS, abnormal CSF parameters or a positive
CMV CSF PCR, chorioretinitis, or a sensorineural hearing
loss)
• Treatment on advice of Infectious Diseases Paediatrician:
• Valganciclovir oral 16 mg/kg/dose twice daily for at least 6
weeks (treatment will be extended to 6 months in most
cases)
• Ganciclovir IV 6 mg/kg/dose twice daily
• Ganciclovir IV at initiation (starting dose: 6mg/kg/dose IV
twice daily) followed by oral Valganciclovir (VGCV)
(16mg/kg/dose twice daily) (on advice of Infectious
Diseases Paediatrician)