N Engl J Med. 1997 Aug 21;337(8):509-15.
The acquisition of herpes simplex virus during pregnancy.
Brown ZA, Selke S, Zeh J, Kopelman J, Maslow A, Ashley RL, Watts DH, Berry S,
Herd M, Corey L.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Washington, Seattle
98195-6460, USA.
Background:
The acquisition of genital herpes during pregnancy has been
associated with spontaneous abortion, prematurity, and congenital and neonatal
herpes. The frequency of seroconversion, maternal symptoms of the disease, and
the timing of its greatest effect on the outcome of pregnancy have not been
systematically studied.
Methods:
We studied 7046 pregnant women whom serologic
tests showed to be at risk for herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection. Serum
samples obtained at the first prenatal visit, at approximately 16 and 24 weeks,
and during labor were tested for antibodies to HSV types 1 and 2 (HSV-1 and
HSV-2) by the Western blot assay, and the results were correlated with the
occurrence of antenatal genital infections.
Results:
Ninety-four of the women
became seropositive for HSV; 34 of the 94 women (36 percent) had symptoms
consistent with herpes infection. Women who were initially seronegative for both
HSV-1 and HSV-2 had an estimated chance of seroconversion for either virus of
3.7 percent; those who were initially seropositive only for HSV-1 had an
estimated chance of HSV-2 seroconversion of 1.7 percent; and those who were
initially HSV-2-seropositive had an estimated chance of zero for acquiring HSV-1
infection. Among the 60 of the 94 pregnancies for which the time of acquisition
of HSV infection was known, 30 percent of the infections occurred in the first
trimester, 30 percent in the second, and 40 percent in the third. HSV
seroconversion completed by the time of labor was not associated with an
increase in neonatal morbidity or with any cases of congenital herpes infection.
However, among the infants born to nine women who acquired genital HSV infection
shortly before labor, neonatal HSV infection occurred in four infants, of whom
one died.
Conclusions:
Two percent or more of susceptible women acquire HSV
infection during pregnancy. Acquisition of infection with seroconversion
completed before labor does not appear to affect the outcome of pregnancy, but
infection acquired near the time of labor is associated with neonatal herpes and
perinatal morbidity.