Houston Chronicle

Study suggests transmissi­on of virus to infants

- By Lenny Bernstein

Researcher­s found the coronaviru­s and antibodies against it in the umbilical cord blood, breast milk, placentas and vaginas of some infected pregnant women, another suggestion that the virus can be passed to fetuses and newborns, according to results of a small study released Thursday.

Just two of the infants in the sample examined by Italian researcher­s tested positive for the virus, and both quickly recovered. In one of the cases, a baby tested negative two days later, an indication that the child was already producing antibodies against the virus in the womb, said Claudio Fenizia, an assistant professor of immunology at the University of Milan, who led the study.

In an interview, Fenizia said the review of 31 pregnant women is preliminar­y and was plagued by factors that make it too early to draw conclusion­s for use in the care of pregnant women infected by the virus.

But, he said, “our study should be considered a ringing bell to raise awareness that (transmissi­on) is possible.” He urged further research in the area, which is underway in some places.

The full study is not yet available. An abstract with results was released Thursday ahead of a one-day worldwide conference on COVID-19 scheduled for Friday. Previous reports on a small number of infected women in China reached similar conclusion­s.

Diana Bianchi, director of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Developmen­t, said she found the results inconclusi­ve. It’s difficult to tell, even in cases in which a newborn tests positive, whether the child was contaminat­ed by bodily fluids from an infected mother during vaginal delivery or cesarean section, she said.

A May study by Northweste­rn University researcher­s that showed damage to the blood vessels in 16 placentas is more troubling, she added. The study found insufficie­nt blood flow from mother to fetus and blood clots in vessels of the placenta.

Bianchi’s center, part of the National Institutes of Health, is funding a review of the records of births this year to help determine the virus’ effect on pregnant women and fetuses. Records from March to December 2020 will be compared with records from the same period of 2019 to see whether the virus caused consistent medical problems in pregnant women, Bianchi said.

Fenizia’s group looked at 31 women with the coronaviru­s in three Milan-area hospitals in March and April. All were late in their pregnancie­s, leaving open the question of the virus’ effect on the early stages of gestation.

The virus was found in one woman’s vagina, one woman’s placenta, one woman’s umbilical cord blood and one woman’s breast milk, the results show. Nine had antibodies in umbilical cord blood and one showed them in breast milk.

Fenizia said the results suggest that it may be important as the pandemic continues to monitor pregnant mothers and newborns for signs of inflammati­on, especially after the discovery of an alarming inflammato­ry syndrome linked to COVID-19 that has affected hundreds of children in the U.S.

At the moment, he said, there are no proven interventi­ons for pregnant women infected by the coronaviru­s. Fenizia said prevention is the best approach.

In its guidance for pregnant women, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention notes that pregnant women “might be at increased risk for severe illness” from COVID-19.

 ?? Charles Krupa / Associated Press file photo ?? The head of a study on pregnant women in Italy said the review was plagued by factors that make it too early to draw conclusion­s but that it “should be considered a ringing bell to raise awareness.”
Charles Krupa / Associated Press file photo The head of a study on pregnant women in Italy said the review was plagued by factors that make it too early to draw conclusion­s but that it “should be considered a ringing bell to raise awareness.”

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