Infants with congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) who were asymptomatic at birth with normal hearing by age 2 years were not at higher risk of intellectual impairment or low academic achievement, compared with controls, but patients with sensorineural hearing loss may experience more difficulty, according to a longitudinal study.
Full-scale intelligence, language, and academic achievement was evaluated in 78 adolescents with cCMV and normal hearing, 11 with cCMV and sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) by age 2 years, and 40 controls. Mean full-scale intelligence scores did not vary among the patients with normal hearing and the controls, said Adriana S. Lopez of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, and her coauthors. Each group scored a mean 108 (95% confidence interval, 105-110 and 104-111, respectively) at age 5 years and 111 (95% CI, 108-114 and 107-104, respectively) at age 18 years (P = .96). The scores of the patients with SNHL, however, were 7 points lower at both times (P less than .05).
Similarly, the investigators reported that the difference in receptive vocabulary scores between cCMV patients with normal hearing and controls was not statistically significant (P = .36), but patients with SNHL scored 13 points lower than the controls (P less than .05).In the other categories (expressive vocabulary and academic achievement in math and reading), the differences between the three groups were not statistically significant (P less than .05 for all three categories), suggesting that the other scores may underestimate the full intellectual potential of cCMV patients with SNHL, according to the researchers (Pediatrics. 2017. doi: 10.1542/peds.2017-1517).
“Findings from our study suggest that
and, therefore, may not need long-term monitoring for cognitive impairment and/or disabilities,” Dr. Lopez and her coauthors wrote. “This information could provide reassurance to parents.”“Further studies are needed to better understand the impact of asymptomatic congenital CMV infection on behavior and specific cognitive domains such as attention, perception, and memory,” they concluded.
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and was supported in other ways by a number of other organizations. Dr. Lopez and her coauthors reported no financial disclosures.