Abstract

Background: This study was carried out in response to the Zika virus epidemic, which constituted a public health emergency, and to the 2019 WHO calling for strengthened surveillance for the early detection of related microcephaly. The main aim of the study was to phenotype the craniofacial morphology of microcephaly using a novel approach and new measurements, and relate the characteristics to brain abnormalities in Zika-infected infants in Brazil to improve clinical surveillance.Methods: 3D images of the face and the cranial vault of 44 Zika-infected infants and matched healthy controls were captured using a 3D stereophotogrammetry system. The CT scans of the brain of the infected infants were analysed. Principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to characterise the craniofacial morphology. In addition to the head circumference (HC), a new measurement, head height (HH), was introduced to measure the cranial vault. The level of brain abnormality present in the CT scans was assessed; the severity of parenchymal volume loss and ventriculomegaly was quantified. Student's t-test and Spearman's Rho statistical test have been applied.Findings: The PCA identified a significant difference (p < 0.001) between the cranial vaults and the face of the Zika infants and that of the controls. Spearman's rank-order correlation coefficients show that the head height (HH) has a strong correlation (0.87 in Zika infants; 0.82 in controls) with the morphology of the cranial vaults, which are higher than the correlation with the routinely used head circumference (HC). Also, the head height (HH) has a moderate negative correlation (−0.48) with the brain abnormalities of parenchymal volume loss.Interpretation: It is discovered that the head height (HH) is the most sensitive and discriminatory measure of the severity of cranial deformity, which should be used for clinical surveillance of the Zika syndrome, evaluation of other craniofacial syndromes and assessment of various treatment modalities.

Highlights

  • The sudden outbreak of the Zika virus infection in 2016 raised grave global concern

  • We explored the relationship between the craniofacial phenotype and the degree of brain abnormality in these infants using Computed tomography (CT) scan data

  • The postnatal head CT scans of the 44 Zika cases were captured by a 16-section scanner (Siemens Healthcare Limited, Surrey, United Kingdom), which were analysed by an independent consultant paediatric radiologist

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Summary

Introduction

The sudden outbreak of the Zika virus infection in 2016 raised grave global concern. The World Health Organisation (WHO) declared international public health emergency to raise the awareness of this epidemic.It called for support in scaling up and strengthening the surveillance systems in countries with reported cases of Zika virus–related microcephaly and other associated neurological conditions1.As of July 2019, a total of 87 countries and territories have had evidence of autochthonous mosquito-borne transmission of Zika virus (ZIKV), distributed across four of the six WHO regions (African Region, Region of the Americas, Southeast Asia Region, and Western Pacific Region) [1]. The World Health Organisation (WHO) declared international public health emergency to raise the awareness of this epidemic. It called for support in scaling up and strengthening the surveillance systems in countries with reported cases of Zika virus–related microcephaly and other associated neurological conditions. The Zika epidemic was severe in the northeast corner of Brazil, where 97% of the country’s Zika infections occurred [2] This area accounts for 28% of all births in Brazil [3]. This study was carried out in response to the Zika virus epidemic, which constituted a public health emergency, and to the 2019 WHO calling for strengthened surveillance for the early detection of related microcephaly. The main aim of the study was to phenotype the craniofacial morphology of microcephaly using a novel approach and new measurements, and relate the characteristics to brain abnormalities in Zika-infected infants in Brazil to improve clinical surveillance

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