Maternal and Fetal Implications of Oropouche Fever, Espírito Santo State, Brazil, 2024
João Paulo Cola, Ana Paula Brioschi dos Santos, Raphael Lubiana Zanotti, A. Costa, Karina Bertazo del Carro, Lesliane de Amorim Lacerda Coelho, Angélica Espinosa Miranda, Creuza Rachel Vicente
Abstract
Reemergence of Oropouche fever in Brazil raises concerns about potential risks for infection in pregnancy. We describe a case series of Oropouche fever in pregnant women and their neonates in Espírito Santo State, Brazil, in 2024. Of 73 pregnancies, 15 pregnancies concluded by the end of the study period; of those, 14 resulted in live births and 1 in spontaneous abortion. Placental reverse transcription PCR tests were positive for Oropouche virus RNA in 5 infections in the third trimester. Two infections occurred in the first trimester, resulting in 1 spontaneous abortion and 1 live birth with corpus callosum dysgenesis. Of 13 infections that occurred in the third trimester, 1 showed possible intrapartum transmission with clinical manifestations in the neonate, whereas the others were asymptomatic. We found no anomalies in third-trimester infections. These findings suggest possible vertical transmission of Oropouche virus and a potential link with spontaneous abortion or malformation.