Microcephaly, other birth defects are on the rise since Zika’s arrival

Zika-infected mothers are 20 times more likely to have babies with certain birth defects

stethoscope on a pregnant woman's belly

ZIKA BABIES   Zika infection during pregnancy substantially raises the risk that the baby will have certain birth defects, such as microcephaly and other brain deformations. A new CDC study quantifies that impact in the United States.

EmiliaUngur/shutterstock

Certain birth defects were 20 times more prevalent in babies born to Zika virus–infected mothers in the United States in 2016 as they were before the virus cropped up in the country. That estimate comes from a study by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The finding strengthens the evidence that a mother’s Zika infection during pregnancy raises her baby’s risk of microcephaly and other brain malformations.

The study, published March 3 in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, examined data collected through birth defect surveillance programs in Massachusetts, North Carolina and Atlanta in 2013 and 2014. In that time frame — before Zika’s U.S. arrival — microcephaly, brain abnormalities or other Zika-associated birth defects appeared in about three out of every 1,000 live births.

But from January to September 2016, 26 babies out of 442 born to mothers with suspected Zika virus infection during pregnancy showed these defects, according to data from the U.S. Zika Pregnancy Registry. That’s an incidence of nearly 60 per 1,000 pregnancies, far higher than the pre-Zika level.

Though the two datasets were collected using different measures and so aren’t directly comparable, the findings bolster previous evidence suggesting that certain brain defects appear much more frequently in babies born to Zika-infected mothers.

More Stories from Science News on Health & Medicine