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Birth defects seen in 6% of US pregnancie­s with Zika

Study also shows that the rate of birth defects was the same for women who didn’t show any signs of infection during their pregnancy as those that did

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NEW YORK— A US study of Zika-infected pregnancie­s found that six percent of them ended in birth defects.

The rate was nearly twice as high for women infected early in pregnancy.

It’s the first published research on outcomes in the United States, and the authors say the findings echo what’s been reported in Brazil and other countries with Zika outbreaks.

It also showed that the rate of birth defects was the same for women who didn’t show any signs of infection during their pregnancy as those that did. That’s important because most people who get infected don’t have any symptoms, said Margaret Honein of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one of the study’s authors. Symptoms include fever, rash, joint pain and red eyes.

“Pregnant women and their health care providers need to understand there is a risk” for infected women who never seemed to get sick, she said on Wednesday.

The study came from a US registry that the CDC started earlier this year to monitor pregnant women with Zika.

All of the women included were infected while in a Zika outbreak country or had sex with someone who got Zika overseas.

Mosquito bites

Zika is primarily spread through mosquito bites.

Out of the 442 pregnancie­s, 26 had birth defects linked to Zika, or six percent.

Among women who were infected in the first three months, the figure rose to 11 percent.

Twenty-one babies were born with birth defects; five of the cases were stillbirth­s, miscarriag­es or abortions — the researcher­s did not say how many of each.

Defects included microcepha­ly, in which a baby’s skull is small because the brain hasn’t developed properly.

Included in the registry are any foreigners who were in the US when their pregnancy ended.

The study did not include the US territory of Puerto Rico, which has been hit hard by Zika.

The CDC study was published this week by the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

Honein said the best estimates now are that 10 to 15 percent of first-trimester infections develop microcepha­ly or certain other problems that can be diagnosed at birth.

Another study this week in the New England Journal of Medicine, done in Brazil by doctors at the University of California, Los Angeles, found that among 117 infants born to Zika-infected moms, 42 percent had “grossly abnormal” clinical or brain imaging findings.

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