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Investigators from the CDC, Atlanta, GA, and Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, conducted a study to assess long-term hearing outcomes in children with symptomatic congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection, and the impact of ganciclovir therapy on hearing loss. For the study, they analyzed data from children born 1983–2005 who were enrolled in the Congenital CMV Longitudinal Study. All study participants had CMV infection detected in urine samples in the first 3 weeks of life and had microcephaly, chorioretinitis, neurologic abnormalities or evidence of reticuloendothelial system involvement (eg, petechiae/purpura). Study children had longitudinal assessments of hearing with auditory brainstem response testing and behavioral audiometry; those with hearing thresholds >20 dB were classified as having sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL). SNHL was defined as congenital if diagnosed in the first month of life. Study children were placed into 3 groups: Group A included patients who had been enrolled in a clinical trial and received ganciclovir; group B included children with SNHL, microcephaly and/or chorioretinitis but who were untreated; and group C comprised those without any of these findings who also were not treated with ganciclovir. The primary study outcome was long-term assessment of hearing loss among children in these 3 groups.
Data were analyzed on 76 children; 17 (22%) in group A, 27 (36%) in group B, and 32 (42%) in group C. Among the 17 children in group A, 16 had microcephaly, chorioretinitis, or congenital SNHL; median duration of ganciclovir treatment in these patients was 40 days. Overall, the most common findings in study patients when they were neonates were purpura/petechiae (82% of those in group A, 78% in group B, and 63% in group C); 71% and 70%, respectively, of those in groups A and B had microcephaly. Congenital SNHL was diagnosed in 65% of patients in group A and 56% for those in group B, although hearing was not assessed in the first month of life in all study participants. The median age at last hearing assessment was 13 years for children in groups A and C and 11 years for those in group B. At that time, 16 (94%) patients in group A, 24 (89%) children in group B, and 16 (50%) group C patients had SNHL. SNHL was categorized as severe (>70 dB) in 12 (71%), 16 (59%), and 7 (22%) children, respectively, in groups A, B, and C.
The authors conclude that most children in this study with congenital CMV infection developed substantial SNHL with or without ganciclovir treatment.
Dr Brady has disclosed no financial relationship relevant to this commentary. This commentary does not contain a discussion of an unapproved/investigative use of a commercial product/device.
The current investigators provide long-term hearing outcomes for infants born 1983–2005 who were enrolled in the Congenital CMV Longitudinal Study. Participants were selected...
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