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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2005, p. 1318-1324, Vol. 43, No. 3
0095-1137/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JCM.43.3.1318-1324.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Institute of Virology,1 Department of Neonatology, Charité-University Medical School Berlin, Humboldt University Berlin, Berlin, Germany2
Received 8 June 2004/ Returned for modification 30 July 2004/ Accepted 16 November 2004
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The reason for DNA and viruses in breast milk was recurrent HCMV infections of the mothers during lactation. Interestingly, reactivation of HCMV has been mostly found restricted to the lactating breast, where the site of latency and virus production as well as the mode of reactivation are still unclear. Most of the virus in the breast milk was found to be free rather than cell associated and HCMV shedding followed defined kinetics with peak levels around 1 month after delivery (2, 11, 30, 32). To date the only confirmed sites of HCMV latency in humans are undifferentiated progenitor cells of monocytes/granulocytes/dendritic cells in the bone marrow (10, 15, 19, 27). Systemic inflammation and stress are the two known mechanisms triggering HCMV reactivation from latency (7, 9, 24, 25).
In different studies postnatal transmission rates of HCMV to term and preterm infants varied between 10% and 60% (2, 3, 8, 11, 20, 28, 32). In the majority of postnatally infected children the HCMV infection remained clinically asymptomatic, however, preterm infants with very low birth weight were found to be at high risk to develop severe HCMV disease. Authors of different studies reported HCMV-associated disease in 0 to 87% of postnatally infected preterm infants (2, 3, 11, 16, 20, 23, 30-32). In our recent study on the role of HCMV for development of bronchopulmonary dysplasia we observed an increased incidence of this severe lung disease in HCMV-infected in comparison to noninfected infants. However, the difference was not statistically significant (23). In this bronchopulmonary dysplasia study we found severe HCMV disease in 1 of 16 (6%) infected preterm infants.
To determine the incidence of HCMV shedding in breast milk among mothers of preterm infants and HCMV infections in their preterm infants, we screened 73 mothers and their 89 preterm infants for HCMV DNA in cell-free milk whey and urine and tracheal-pharyngeal aspirates, respectively. The frequency of virus reactivation during lactation and transmission to the infants was determined for 28 mothers for which the HCMV serostatus was known. Our results strongly support that HCMV is reactivated in nearly all latently infected mothers and is shed within the breast milk. Preterm infants were found to be at significant risk of acquiring asymptomatic HCMV infection and even severe HCMV-associated disease. Moreover, HCMV infection in preterm infants may contribute to the development of chronic lung diseases.
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Birth weights ranged from 380 to 2,010 g (median, 1,119 g), the median gestational age was 28 weeks (range, 24 to 33 weeks) (Table 1). Infants with prenatal HCMV infection as well as serious malformations and undetermined metabolic disorders were excluded from the study, as were infants who died within the study period. For blood transfusions only HCMV-seronegative blood products from the hospital's blood bank were used. Infants were fed fresh untreated breast milk from their own mothers eight times daily via a nasogastric tube. Feeding was started as early as possible, normally between 24 and 48 h after birth, with 1-ml portions that were increased daily by 1 to 2 ml/kg/portion up to one-sixth of their body weight. If maternal milk production was delayed, a special formula for preterm infants was given at the same frequency and dose until sufficient breast milk was produced by the mother. These studies were approved by the Ethics Committee of the Medical School Charité, and informed consent was obtained from all mothers. Sixty-one of the 89 infants had been enrolled in the study on HCMV infection and bronchopulmonary dysplasia as published very recently (23).
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TABLE 1. Clinical characteristics of uninfected and HCMV-infected infantsa
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To determine the HCMV transmission rate tracheal aspirates from ventilated babies and pharyngeal aspirates from spontaneously breathing infants as well as urine samples were collected weekly and immediately frozen at 20°C until DNA preparation as described in more detail elsewhere (23). Tracheal aspirates were collected after installation of 0.5 ml of sterile saline into the endotracheal tube by gentle aspiration through the endotracheal tube in a sterile tube.
Nucleic acid preparation and PCR. Isolation of DNA from tracheal aspirates and pharyngeal aspirates and urine and HCMV PCR were done as described recently (23). Breast milk was repeatedly centrifuged to eliminate fat globules and milk cells to generate cell-free milk whey (12). Milk whey was then passed through a sterile filter (0.2 µm; Schleicher & Schüll, Dassel, Germany) aliquoted, and stored at 80°C until performing PCR. Citrated blood was separated on Ficoll/Paque gradients to isolate PBMC (23). DNA from milk whey, PBMC, and urine as well as tracheal aspirates and pharyngeal aspirates was isolated with the QIAamp blood Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) or the Pure Viral Nucleo Acid kit (Roche, Mannheim, Germany) after confirming comparable efficiency in DNA isolation of both kits. Routinely, DNA was isolated from 200 µl of urine, tracheal aspirates and pharyngeal aspirates, or cell-free milk whey and finally resolved in 50 µl of buffer as recommended by the manufacturer.
HCMV DNA amplification was carried out in a 50-µl reaction volume containing 10 µl of DNA with a one-step PCR and 40 cycles of amplification with 30 s of denaturation at 92°C, 1 min of primer annealing at 55°C, and 1 min of primer extension at 72°C. The sensitivity of the PCR was determined to be
50 copies of viral DNA per reaction. For amplification, HCMV-specific DNA primers complementary to the major immediate-early (IE) region were used. These primers amplified a 123-bp fragment of the IE1 protein coding sequence as described earlier (21-23). The PCR products were separated by 3% agarose gel electrophoresis and stained with ethidium bromide. The specificity of the amplified DNA fragments was confirmed by Southern hybridization with the internal oligonucleotide probe P2 terminally labeled with [
-32P]ATP (Hartmann Analytik, Braunschweig, Germany) and T4 polynucleotide kinase (Roche, Mannheim, Germany) (21-23). DNA samples negative for HCMV were probed for successful DNA preparation by beta-globin PCR according to Bauer et al. (3).
Serology. Serum IgM and IgG anti-HCMV antibody concentrations were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay techniques with the CMV-IgM enzyme-linked assay (Medac, Hamburg, Germany) and ETI-Cytok-G Plus (Sorin Biomedica, Saluggia, Italy), respectively.
Procedure. Breast milk, tracheal aspirates and pharyngeal aspirates, and urine specimens were collected at days 3, 7, 14, 28, 35, 42, 49, 56, and 64 postpartum and frozen until DNA preparation and PCR analysis. PBMC were prepared immediately after collecting the citrated blood. DNA preparation and PCR of specimens from the same individual were done independently on different days and in different PCRs to minimize the risk of false-positive results by contamination. Active HCMV infection was defined by repeated amplification of viral DNA from at least three consecutive urine and/or tracheal aspirate and pharyngeal aspirate samples.
Statistical analysis. Statistical significance was tested with the nonparametric Mann-Whitney or Kruskal-Wallis test (Statgraphics 4.0 software, Manogistics). The significance level was set at P < 0.05.
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FIG. 1. Incidence of HCMV reactivation and HCMV DNA in breast milk in breastfeeding mothers and the risk of HCMV transmission to their preterm infants. *, One mother transmitted the virus to both twins, resulting in eight HCMV-infected infants. The mode of infection for individual infants remains speculative, only for five of them was postnatal infection confirmed, supporting the hypothesis that HCMV-containing breast milk was the source of infection.
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TABLE 2. Correlation between HCMV serostatus, HCMV DNA in breast milk, and HCMV DNA in blood in breastfeeding mothers
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FIG. 2. Autoradiogram of Southern blot analysis of HCMV PCR products. PCR products were separated on a 3% agarose gel, transferred to a nylon membrane, and hybridized with internal oligonucleotide P2 (21) end labeled by T4 polynucleotide kinase and [ -32P]ATP. Hybridization was carried out for 18 h at 52°C in 5x SSC-5x Denhardt's solution-0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate. After washing, the filters were exposed to a phosphoscreen. Hybridization signals were visualized by phosphoimaging (PhosphorImager, type SI). P, positive control (0.1 pg of AD169 DNA); N, negative (buffer) control; M, breast milk; TA, tracheal aspirate; U, urine. The PCR products from one mother-child pair are underlined.
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Postnatal HCMV infection could be confirmed for 12 of the 21 infected infants. In these infants HCMV DNA was detected in urine not earlier than after 2 weeks postpartum and following negative PCR with urine collected during the first 2 weeks (1, 11). For nine infants from nine mothers the mode and time of infection remained unclear as HCMV DNA became detectable in urine during the first 2 weeks of life (Table 3). Notably, among the infants with postnatal HCMV infection, one of the twins (the second child remained unaffected) acquired HCMV in the urine despite no detectable HCMV DNA in the breast milk of the mother during the study period. Since the HCMV serostatus of the mother was unknown, HCMV transmission to this infant might be independent of the mother. For this infant, nosocomial infection, e.g., by transfusion of HCMV-positive blood from a seronegative screened blood donor, cannot be ruled out. Including this child, the number of HCMV-infected infants in our study was 22, 13 of which developed postnatal infection (Table 3).
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TABLE 3. Diagnostic and clinical data for the 22 infants with HCMV infection
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Although the remaining 20 infants with HCMV infection did not demonstrate classical symptoms of HCMV disease, neonatal infection (interleukin-6,
100 pg/ml of plasma), retinopathia neonatorum, respiratory distress syndrome due to surfactant deficiency, and bronchopulmonary dysplasia were more frequently observed than in infants without HCMV infection (Table 1). However, these differences were not statistically significant. Most HCMV-infected infants also had to be ventilated for a longer time than those without HCMV infection.
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Interestingly, the seronegative but breast milk-positive mother transmitted the virus to her infant. In a similar study using cell-free milk whey, HCMV reactivation was observed in 50% of all mothers and in 96% of HCMV-seropositive mothers (11). Different studies done in Japan with unfractionated breast milk (for which HCMV DNA PCR was found slightly less sensitive [11]) revealed HCMV DNA in breast milk in 40 to 70% of all mothers (despite an overall seroprevalence as high as 90%) and in 67 to 92% of seropositive mothers (2, 14, 20, 32). In summary, our study shows that in all latently infected mothers, HCMV is reactivated during lactation and shed within the breast milk.
The careful studies by Hamprecht et al. (11, 13) indicated that HCMV DNA in breast milk is the consequence of locally restricted virus reactivation in the breast rather than the consequence of a systemic virus reactivation. We observed HCMV DNA in the blood in only 2 of 13 seropositive mothers with HCMV DNA in breast milk, which is in agreement with their results. At present the mechanism and site of HCMV reactivation during lactation are not known. The only definitively known sites of HCMV latency are granulocyte/monocyte/dendritic cell precursors in the bone marrow (10, 15, 19, 27). However, systemic infections were observed very rarely in our study or those done by others. Furthermore, viral load in the cell fraction of breast milk was significantly lower than in the cell-free milk whey (2, 11). These observations may lead to the hypothesis that the human breast harbors latently infected cells or latently infected cells are transported very efficiently into the lactating breast.
In the lactating breast, bioactive substances may be produced or accumulated, which induce or support replication of the virus in its target cells. Using in vitro transfection and infection systems, we were recently able to show that cell-free milk whey is indeed able to stimulate HCMV IE1/2 enhancer/promoter-derived gene expression in monocytic cells (one possible target cell type for HCMV in the lactating breast). This promoter is responsible for initiation of viral replication and, moreover, determines the efficiency of replication. Additionally, milk whey enhanced HCMV replication in permissive human embryonal lung fibroblasts (J. Meier et al., unpublished observations).
In our study, 7 of 19 (37%) HCMV antibody- and breast milk-positive mothers are suspected to have transmitted the virus to their eight infants. Among all 48 breast milk-positive (and therefore HCMV-positive) mothers screened, 42% (20 of 48) are suspected to have transmitted HCMV to their 21 infants, including one mother who transmitted the virus to both twins. In similar studies, transmission was observed in 5 to 37% of HCMV-positive mother-infant pairs (2, 11, 17, 20, 32). The lower transmission rates of 25%, 10%, and 5% observed by Mosca et al. (20), Yasuda et al. (32), and Sharland et al. (26), respectively, may be caused by prophylactic application of intravenous immunoglobulins (20) and freezing of the milk 26, 32) before feeding. In our hospital, breast milk was frozen only sporadically; normally, infants (including preterm babies) were fed untreated breast milk. In addition to the 21 infants from breast milk-positive mothers, there was one twin who became postnatally infected, although the mother was breast milk negative. The reason for this infection is unknown but could be independent of breastfeeding. Including this child, the total number of infected preterm infants in our study group was 22.
For 13 of the 22 HCMV-infected babies, postnatal infection could be confirmed as HCMV DNA became detectable in urine not earlier then 2 weeks after delivery. Infection of these infants (with one exception, see above) was preceded by feeding with HCMV DNA-containing breast milk, supporting that feeding of HCMV-containing milk is a source of HCMV transmission from mother to child. In the other nine infants we found HCMV DNA in urine during the first and second weeks of life. The mode of HCMV transmission to these infants remained unclear, and breastfeeding alone seems not to be responsible for viral transmission. One possibility is perinatal transmission, however, only three of the nine (33%) infants were born vaginally, supporting possible infection by contact with HCMV-contaminated genital secretions. Additionally, perinatal infection seems highly unlikely because in a more recent study on perinatal HCMV transmission, the investigators detected HCMV DNA in only 1 of 24 different cervical swabs (20). Asymptomatic intrauterine infection cannot be ruled out. However, in placenta tissue and umbilical cord blood from five of five infants with unclear modes of infection no HCMV DNA was detected. For a control, HCMV DNA could be amplified from both specimens from a baby with symptomatic prenatal infection, but not from the specimens from 25 noninfected infants (data not shown).
Two of the 13 postnatally infected preterm babies (9% of all 22 infected infants, 15% of infants with verified postnatal infection) developed severe symptomatic HCMV disease with sepsis-like symptoms in one child and hepatitis with cholestase/icterus in the other one. Development of sepsis-like symptoms in one infant correlated with an extremely low birth weight (380 g) supporting that especially preterm infants with very low birth weight have an increased risk for symptomatic HCMV disease following breastfeeding with HCMV-containing milk. Similarly, Hamprecht et al. (11) observed severe symptomatic infection (4 cases of sepsis-like disease) in 12% (4/33) of postnatally infected infants with extremely low birth weight. In other studies in which infants were prophylactically treated with immunoglobulines or fed with pretreated (freezing) milk, symptomatic HCMV disease was not observed (2, 20, 26, 32). However, very recently freezing of breast milk has been found to be not sufficient to prevent HCMV transmission (18). More careful clinical analysis of HCMV-infected infants in the German study group even revealed that half of the infected children (16/33, 48%) had clinical symptoms compatible with HCMV infection (17). Similarly, we observed bronchopulmonary dysplasia, respiratory distress syndrome, amniotic infection, and neonatal infection in half of the HCMV-positive infants. Moreover, the overall incidences of bronchopulmonary dysplasia, respiratory distress syndrome, retinopathia neonatorum and neonatal infection were increased in HCMV-infected infants compared to noninfected infants (41 vs. 33%, 64 vs. 45%, 32 vs. 18% and 50 vs. 39%, respectively), however, these differences were not statistically significant.
In summary, it should be taken in consideration that HCMV becomes reactivated in all latently infected mothers during lactation and is shed within the breast milk. Preterm infants of HCMV-positive mothers are particularly at a high risk of getting infected. At least 10% of infected preterm infants may develop severe clinical symptomatic HCMV disease. In up to 50% of infected infants HCMV may contribute clinical complications commonly observed in preterm infants (e.g., bronchopulmonary dysplasia, respiratory distress syndrome) and may delay development of infants (e.g., maturation of the lung). Our recent studies (4) on the mechanisms involved in HCMV-associated lung pathogenesis support the idea that the virus, by inhibiting expression of the epidermal growth factor receptor, may contribute to delayed lung maturation and impaired function of the surfactant system. This finding correlates with the observation that HCMV was present in the respiratory tract of all infected preterm infants and that the time of assisted respiration for HCMV-infected infants was higher than for noninfected infants (23; this paper).
Considering that in Germany at least 10% of HCMV-infected preterm infants become severely ill following HCMV infection during the early postnatal period methods for efficient inactivation of the virus in the breast milk without impairment of its immunological and nutritional constituents should be developed and introduced in clinical routine. As the risk of developing HCMV disease is particularly high in preterm infants with very low birth weights, we would like to recommend that mothers initially treat the breast milk given to very preterm infants born before and during the 28th week of gestation. The time period for feeding pretreated breast milk can be limited to the first 6 weeks, according to the findings of Hamprecht et al. (11), who observed significant DNA in breast milk up to day 40 postpartum. This period should be adapted individually for infants who can be breastfed. Similarly, the Austrian Society of Pediatrics recommended pasteurization of breast milk for all HCMV-seropositive mothers until gestational week 34 to minimize the risk of postnatal HCMV transmission (33). Because our study also demonstrated that serological methods alone may not be sufficient to identify all potential HCMV transmitting mothers, treatment of breast milk should be performed independently of the serostatus of the women.
The work was supported by a grant from the University Hospital Charité and the German Research Foundation, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft SFB 421.
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for reactivation and replication of human cytomegalovirus, p. 29-34. In M. Scholz, H. F. Rabenau, H. W. Doerr, and J. Cinatl (ed.), CMV-related immunopathology, Monographs in Virology, vol. 21. Karger, Basel, Switzerland.
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