Health
Advisory
CDC GUIDANCE FOR TRAVEL AND TESTING OF PREGNANT WOMEN AND WOMEN OF REPRODUCTIVE AGE FOR ZIKA VIRUS
INFECTION RELATED TO THE INVESTIGATION FOR LOCAL MOSQUITO-BORNE ZIKA VIRUS TRANSMISSION IN
MIAMI-DADE AND BROWARD COUNTIES, FLORIDA
FORWARDED FROM THE CDC BY THE DELAWARE DIVISION OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Summary
The Florida Department of Health (FL DOH) has identified an area with local mosquito-borne Zika virus transmission (active Zika virus
transmission) in Miami ( http://www.cdc.gov/zika/intheus/florida-update.html). Based on the earliest
time of symptom onset and a maximal two-week incubation period for Zika virus, this guidance applies to women of reproductive age and
their partners who live in or traveled to this area after June 15, 2016.
This is an ongoing investigation, and CDC is rapidly learning more about the extent of active Zika virus transmission in the area
identified by the FL DOH. With the recommendations below, CDC is applying existing guidance to the occurrence of Zika virus transmission
in this area of Florida. As more information becomes available, we will update these recommendations.
Recommendations
- Pregnant women should avoid non-essential travel to the area with active Zika virus transmission identified by the FL DOH.
- Pregnant women and their partners living in or traveling to the area with active Zika virus transmission identified by the FL DOH
should follow steps to prevent mosquito bites ( http://www.cdc.gov/zika/prevention/prevent-mosquito-bites.html).
- Women and men who live in or who have traveled to the area with active Zika virus transmission identified by the FL DOH and who have
a pregnant sex partner should consistently and correctly use condoms or other barriers to prevent infection during sex or not have sex
for the duration of the pregnancy.
- All pregnant women in the United States should be assessed for possible Zika virus exposure during each prenatal care visit. Women
with ongoing risk of possible exposure include those who live in or frequently travel to the area with active Zika virus transmission
identified by the FL DOH. Women with limited risk include those who traveled to the area with active Zika virus transmission identified
by the FL DOH or had sex with a partner who lives in or traveled to the area with active Zika virus transmission without using condoms or
other barrier methods to prevent infection. Each evaluation should include an assessment of signs and symptoms of Zika virus disease
(acute onset of fever, rash, arthralgia, conjunctivitis), their travel history as well as their sexual partner’s potential exposure
to Zika virus and history of any illness consistent with Zika virus disease to determine whether Zika virus testing is indicated.
- Pregnant women with possible exposure to Zika virus and signs or symptoms consistent with Zika virus disease should be tested for
Zika virus infection based on time of evaluation relative to symptom onset in accordance with CDC guidance (http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/65/wr/mm6529e1.htm?s_cid=mm6529e1_e).
- Pregnant women with ongoing risk of possible Zika virus exposure and who do not report symptoms of Zika virus disease should be
tested in the first and second trimester of pregnancy in accordance with CDC guidance ( http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/65/wr/mm6529e1.htm?s_cid=mm6529e1_e).
- Pregnant women with limited risk and who do not report symptoms should consult with their healthcare providers to obtain testing for
Zika virus infection based on the elapsed interval since their last possible exposure in accordance with CDC guidance (http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/65/wr/mm6529e1.htm?s_cid=mm6529e1_e).
- Women with Zika virus disease should wait at least eight weeks and men with Zika virus disease should wait at least six months after
symptom onset to attempt conception.
- Women and men with ongoing risk of possible Zika virus exposure who do not have signs or symptoms consistent with Zika virus disease
and are considering pregnancy should consult their healthcare provider. Due to the ongoing risk of possible Zika virus exposure,
healthcare providers should discuss the risks of Zika, emphasize ways to prevent Zika virus infection, and provide information about safe
and effective contraceptive methods. As part of their pregnancy planning and counseling with their health care providers, some
women and their partners living in the area with active Zika virus transmission identified by the FL DOH might decide to delay pregnancy.
- Women and men with limited risk and who do not report signs or symptoms consistent with Zika virus disease should wait at least eight
weeks after last possible exposure to attempt conception.
Background
Zika is spread to people primarily through the bite of an infected Aedes species mosquito (Ae. aegypti and Ae.
albopictus). Zika virus can also be sexually transmitted. Zika virus infection during pregnancy can cause microcephaly and severe
fetal brain defects, and has been associated with other adverse pregnancy outcomes. Most persons infected with Zika virus will not have
symptoms; infants with microcephaly and other birth defects have been born to women with Zika virus infection who do not report symptoms.
CDC’s testing recommendations for pregnant women with ongoing or limited risk for possible Zika virus exposure who report clinical
illness consistent with Zika virus disease (symptomatic pregnant women) are the same. Symptomatic pregnant women who are evaluated less
than two weeks after symptom onset should receive serum and urine Zika virus rRT-PCR testing. Symptomatic pregnant women who are
evaluated two to 12 weeks after symptom onset should first receive a Zika virus immunoglobulin (IgM) antibody test; if the IgM antibody
test result is positive or equivocal (unclear), serum and urine rRT-PCR testing should be performed.
Testing recommendations for pregnant women with possible Zika virus exposure who do not report clinical illness consistent with Zika
virus disease (asymptomatic pregnant women) differ based on the circumstances of possible exposure. For asymptomatic pregnant women with
ongoing risk for possible exposure and who are evaluated less than two weeks after last possible exposure, rRT-PCR testing should be
performed. If the rRT-PCR result is negative, a Zika virus IgM antibody test should be performed two to 12 weeks after the exposure.
Asymptomatic pregnant with limited risk for possible exposure who are first evaluated 2–12 weeks after their last possible exposure
should first receive a Zika virus IgM antibody test; if the IgM antibody test result is positive or equivocal, serum and urine rRT-PCR
should be performed. Asymptomatic pregnant women with ongoing risk for possible exposure to Zika virus should receive Zika virus IgM
antibody testing as part of routine obstetric care during the first and second trimesters; immediate rRT-PCR testing should be performed
when IgM antibody test results are positive or equivocal.
Further information on the interpretation of testing results and clinical management of pregnant women with laboratory evidence of
possible Zika virus infection are available below.
For More Information
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