Background: Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is the most frequent agent of viral infection in the fetus; it causes varying damage, particularly neurologic, which becomes evident at birth or in infancy in about 20% of infected individuals. Postnatal acquisition is usually asymptomatic and without sequelae. Laboratory diagnosis of congenital and postnatal infection is based on the demonstration of virus in urine.
Objectives: To investigate the systemic spread of CMV in neonates with congenital or postnatal infection and to evaluate its significance in diagnosis and in monitoring anti-CMV treatments.
Design: Quantitative determinations of infective CMV (viremia) and viral antigen pp65 (antigenemia) were performed on peripheral blood leukocytes (PBL) from the buffy coat of heparinized blood from children with a diagnosis of congenital (n = 19) or postnatal (n = 19) infection based on viral isolation from urine.
Results: Antigen pp65 in PBL was detected particularly in children with symptomatic infection, both congenital (100%) and postnatal (79%; P > 0.05), and significantly less frequently (50%; P < 0.001) in those with asymptomatic infection. Viremia was observed less often but always in association with antigenemia. Both tests became negative within 6 months. Neither viral titer nor persistent positivity was related to clinical manifestations. In the nine infants given anti-CMV therapy (ganciclovir and/or hyperimmune gamma-globulins) an early suspension of treatment resulted in the appearance of antigenemia and/or viremia.
Conclusions: Cytomegalovirus was detected in PBL mainly in the most severely affected children. Monitoring antigenemia and viremia in CMV-infected infants is recommended to demonstrate persistent systemic infection and to evaluate virologic results of treatment.