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Pregnant women with coronavirus infection can pass it to their babies, study finds

Newborns in a hospital
Newborns in a hospital nursery. A new study of 33 Chinese women who contracted the new coronavirus during pregnancy reports that three passed it on to their babies.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
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A study of 33 pregnant women in China who were infected with the new coronavirus found that three of them gave birth to babies with COVID-19.

All three infants survived after receiving treatment for their symptoms, doctors reported Thursday in the medical journal JAMA Pediatrics.

One of those infants was delivered by caesarean section nearly nine weeks before its due date because the mother was suffering from pneumonia caused by COVID-19. That baby’s health problems may have been primarily due to being born prematurely, not because it was infected with the coronavirus known as SARS-CoV-2, the authors wrote.

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“The clinical symptoms from 33 neonates with or at risk of COVID-19 were mild and outcomes were favorable,” wrote the authors, who were from two children’s hospitals in Wuhan and one in Shanghai.

“Because strict infection control and prevention procedures were implemented during the delivery, it is likely that the sources of SARS-CoV-2 in the neonates ... were maternal in origin,” the doctors added. “It is crucial to screen pregnant women and implement strict infection control measures, quarantine of infected mothers, and close monitoring of neonates at risk of COVID-19.”

Two of the infants born with coronavirus infections were delivered at full term, one after 40 weeks’ gestation and the other after 40 weeks and 4 days. Even so, both babies were lethargic and feverish with signs of pneumonia in their lungs, and one of them experienced vomiting.

Both tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 on their second and fourth day of life. By Day 6, those tests came back negative.

The premature infant had a more difficult path to recovery. Born at 31 weeks and 2 days after showing signs of fetal distress, the baby was diagnosed with neonatal respiratory distress syndrome and pneumonia and had to be resuscitated.

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Like the other infants, this newborn tested positive for the coronavirus infection on Days 2 and 4 of life, but test results were negative by Day 7.

It took another week for the infant to recover from its respiratory problems, following treatment with antibiotics, caffeine and noninvasive ventilation, according to the report.

Pregnancy is filled with so much unspoken anxiety in the best of times. Coronavirus adds another question into the mix: What happens if I get sick?

Dr. David Kimberlin, a professor of pediatric infectious diseases at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, said he was somewhat surprised that the newborns’ infections cleared as quickly as they did.

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During this outbreak, children have appeared to be less severely affected by COVID-19 than older adults, and researchers have struggled to explain why. One hypothesis is that children acquire and share other kinds of coronaviruses — many of which cause only mild, cold-like symptoms — that might offer some kind of protection against SARS-CoV-2.

But newborns have not had this kind of exposure, so that could not explain why the virus cleared so quickly in these three cases, Kimberlin said. Another hypothesis is that a baby’s immune system is too underdeveloped to mount the kind of extreme response that could lead to further complications and even death.

Exactly what forces were at work remain very unclear, particularly with a sample size of just three babies, said Kimberlin, who was not involved in the study.

“I think it adds something,” he said of the newborns’ timely recovery from the virus. “What it adds, I don’t think we really fully can appreciate yet.”

Kimberlin co-wrote an editorial addressing two other papers published Thursday in the Journal of the American Medical Assn. that looked for evidence that COVID-19 could pass from mother to fetus in utero. Those studies were “not conclusive,” he and a colleague wrote.

The study in JAMA Pediatrics made a much stronger case that transmission might be happening around or during the birth process, Kimberlin said — although exactly how that might be happening remains unclear.

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For now, this study serves as a sort of proof of principle that COVID-19 transmission is possible, but not whether it’s likely, he added.

Dr. Neil Silverman, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at UCLA, said the study, while small, was an important early step toward answering those questions.

Reports like this “can help us potentially and hopefully craft a better sense of if and how COVID-19 can be passed from an infected mother to the fetus or newborn,” he said.

Researchers will need a much larger sample size to get a firmer grasp on how the coronavirus can affect pregnant women and their newborns, and at what rate, both Silverman and Kimberlin said. In the U.S., that will mean building up capacity to track infants born to mothers with COVID-19.

Silverman also said the findings indicated that pregnant women did not need to switch from vaginal birth to cesarean delivery if they considered doing so on account of the outbreak.

Generally speaking, “a newborn comes into contact with maternal body fluids either way,” he said. “So if that’s the case, then there’s no reason to think that C-section would be particularly protective.”

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The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists also says that, in most cases, pregnant women with COVID-19 do not need to change the timing or delivery method of their birth plans.

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