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Saliva test can reveal silent virus that steals babies’ hearing

  • June 01, 2011

UAB research reveals a better way to protect newborns from cytomegalovirus, often passed to them from their mothers.

Although cytomegalovirus infection is a known cause of birth defects, including permanent hearing loss, most CMV infections in infants are not identified early, when interventions can lessen the effects of hearing loss.

Now, Suresh Boppana, M.D., and Karen Fowler, Dr.P.H., from the University of Alabama at Birmingham and colleagues from other academic medical centers report that a polymerase chain-reaction (PCR)-based saliva test can identify CMV in newborns with greater than 97 percent accuracy. The traditional testing method, a “rapid culture” saliva test, is also accurate, but Boppana says it is not feasible to screen a large number of babies because of its expense, the time it takes for results and the requirement for a tissue culture facility.

The findings from their multi-center study will be published in the June 2, 2011, issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

“Our objective was to find what method could test for CMV in a larger sample, rapidly, reliably and relatively inexpensively. We found that testing saliva works well,” says Boppana, a professor of Pediatric Infectious Diseases and the paper’s corresponding author.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in 150 babies will be born with CMV. “When you look at babies in the nursery, you don’t even know which ones are infected; they’re like any other baby in there,” Boppana says.

There is currently no cure for CMV infection or even a clear connection between CMV and hearing loss. But Boppana says babies should still be tested within the first two to three weeks of birth. The sooner doctors know a baby is infected with CMV, the better they can monitor and intervene if a child develops hearing loss. Those interventions include speech therapy, hearing aids, cochlear implants and physical therapy.

CMV is the most common infection passed from a mother to her unborn child, and there is no vaccine for it. “If a pregnant woman acquires CMV for the first time during pregnancy, then the chances of her passing it on to the baby are 30 to 60 percent,” Boppana says.

Fowler says there are a variety of ways that a mother can contract CMV.

“Often mothers get the virus through exposure to young children — children in the household or their friends’ children or children who have been in day care. But CMV also can be transmitted between adults sexually,” says Fowler, also a professor of pediatric infectious diseases.

Some 35,000 babies were tested for CMV with the saliva assay during the study. Infants who tested positive will be enrolled in a follow-up program to monitor their hearing every six months until they are 4 years old.

Bopanna and Fowler practice at Children’s Hospital of Alabama. Other authors on the paper were from the University of Mississippi Medical Center, the Carolinas Medical Center, the University of Pittsburgh and the Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and the University of Cincinnati, and Saint Peter’s University Hospital and Drexel University College of Medicine.

For patient information, please visit www.uabmedicine.org.