DOI: 10.3390/v18070713 ISSN: 1999-4915

Congenital Cytomegalovirus Infection in Pregnancy: Challenges in Early Diagnosis, Reinfection, and Secondary Prevention

Cinzia Auriti, Chiara Maddaloni, Sara Ronci, Alessandra Santisi, Ludovica Martini, Andrea Dotta, Maria Paola Ronchetti, Domenico Umberto De Rose

Cytomegalovirus (CMV) remains one of the most relevant congenital and early-life infections in pediatrics because of its high global seroprevalence, lifelong latency, and potential for reactivation or reinfection. Biologically, the virus poses a particular threat during pregnancy, when maternal primary infection carries a substantially higher risk of transplacental transmission than non-primary infection, with fetal and neonatal consequences that vary according to gestational timing and host vulnerability. In children, CMV infection is common in the first years of life and may contribute to a broad spectrum of outcomes, ranging from asymptomatic infection to severe multisystem disease, neurodevelopmental impairment, and sensorineural hearing loss. Clinically, the document highlights the importance of timely maternal diagnosis, differentiation between primary and recurrent infection, and integration of prenatal, neonatal, radiological, and audiological assessment. Attention is given to symptomatic and asymptomatic newborns, preterm infants, and infants exposed through breast milk. The availability of antiviral strategies in pregnancy and infancy strengthens the rationale for early identification and risk stratification. Universal newborn screening emerges as a potentially valuable approach to improve case detection, enable prompt follow-up, and reduce long-term disability. Overall, a multidisciplinary and early-intervention framework is essential to optimize prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and long-term outcomes in pediatric CMV infections.

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