- Martinez, Viviana Fajardo;
- Zhang, Dajie;
- Paiola, Sophia;
- Mok, Thalia;
- Cambou, Mary C;
- Kerin, Tara;
- Rao, Rashmi;
- Brasil, Patricia;
- Ferreira, Fatima;
- Fuller, Trevon;
- Bhattacharya, Debika;
- Foo, Suan-Sin;
- Chen, Weiqiang;
- Jung, Jae;
- Einspieler, Christa;
- Marschik, Peter B;
- Nielsen-Saines, Karin
Objective
To evaluate neuromotor repertoires and developmental milestones in infants exposed to antenatal COVID-19.Design
Longitudinal cohort study.Setting
Hospital-based study in Los Angeles, USA and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil between March 2020 and December 2021.Participants
Infants born to mothers with COVID-19 during pregnancy and prepandemic control infants from the Graz University Database.Interventions
General movement assessment (GMA) videos between 3 and 5 months post-term age were collected and clinical assessments/developmental milestones evaluated at 6-8 months of age. Cases were matched by gestational age, gender and post-term age to prepandemic neurotypical unexposed controls from the database.Main outcome measures
Motor Optimality Scores Revised (MOS-R) at 3-5 months. Presence of developmental delay (DD) at 6-8 months.Results
239 infants were enrolled; 124 cases (83 in the USA/41 in Brazil) and 115 controls. GMA was assessed in 115 cases and 115 controls; 25% were preterm. Median MOS-R in cases was 23 (IQR 21-24, range 9-28) vs 25 (IQR 24-26, range 20-28) in controls, p<0.001. Sixteen infants (14%) had MOS-R scores <20 vs zero controls, p<0.001. At 6-8 months, 13 of 109 case infants (12%) failed to attain developmental milestones; all 115 control infants had normal development. The timing of maternal infection in pregnancy (first, second or third trimester) or COVID-19 disease severity (NIH categories asymptomatic, mild/moderate or severe/critical) was not associated with suboptimal MOS-R or DD. Maternal fever in pregnancy was associated with DD (OR 3.7; 95% CI 1.12 to 12.60) but not suboptimal MOS-R (OR 0.25; 95% CI 0.04 to 0.96).Conclusions
Compared with prepandemic controls, infants exposed to antenatal COVID-19 more frequently had suboptimal neuromotor development.