A study involving more than 10 million children in Brazil finds a significantly higher risk of epilepsy-related hospitalization in early childhood in those with congenital Zika syndrome (CZS).
For the study, published yesterday in JAMA Pediatrics, researchers in Brazil and the United Kingdom analyzed national data to compare the risk of epilepsy-related hospitalizations during the first four years of life among children exposed to Zika virus (ZIKV) in utero (with and without CZS) compared with their unexposed peers.
The children were singletons born at 22 or more weeks’ gestation from January 2015 to November 2018. The average gestational age was 38.5 weeks, 0.03% had CZS, and 0.08% were exposed to ZIKV in utero but didn’t develop CZS. ZIKV is primarily spread by infected Aedes mosquitoes, from mother to fetus or baby, and via unprotected sex.
“Some cases of epilepsy are primary, with no identifiable underlying cause, while others are secondary to structural abnormalities in the central nervous system,” the study authors noted. “An example of the latter is congenital Zika syndrome (CZS), where epilepsy is a clinical manifestation in nearly 50% of affected children, increasing to approximately 99% when microcephaly [abnormally small head size] is also present.”
Findings independent of microcephaly
After adjusting for confounding factors, CZS was tied to a markedly elevated risk of epilepsy-related hospitalization (2.44 vs 0.04 per 100 person-years in those without CZS; adjusted HR [aHR], 34.2). Age-specific aHRs peaked at 7 to 18 months (aHRs, 33.7 at ages 0 to 6 months, 44.6 for ages 7 to 18 months, and 20.6 for ages 19 to 48 months).
These results suggest that prenatal ZIKV exposure alone may not elevate epilepsy risk requiring hospitalization, while CZS was associated with early childhood epilepsy-related hospitalizations.
Children with CZS who were microcephalic, normocephalic (normal head size), or macrocephalic (abnormally large head) showed similar links to hospitalizations for epilepsy, but those exposed to ZIKV without CZS weren’t at higher risk than their unexposed counterparts (aHR, 0.66).
“These results suggest that prenatal ZIKV exposure alone may not elevate epilepsy risk requiring hospitalization, while CZS was associated with early childhood epilepsy-related hospitalizations,” the study authors wrote. “These findings for children with CZS were independent of the presence of microcephaly.”