Zika: Q&A with the doctor who studies mothers and babies

Gleyse Kelly da Silva embraces her daughter Maria Giovanna, who has microcephaly, in Recife, Brazil, January 25, 2016.

'The key thing is finding out when people are most vulnerable to Zika' Image: REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino

Laura Rodrigues
Professor of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
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Is Zika really the cause of microcephaly? And if so, when are pregnant women most at risk? We hear from Laura Rodrigues, Professor of Infectious Disease Epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, who is studying mothers and babies affected by Zika virus in Brazil.

Where are you at the moment?

I’m in the city of Recife, on the eastern tip of Brazil. It’s the capital of Pernambuco, the state at the centre of the Zika epidemic.

Was anyone prepared for this?

Not at all – it came as a surprise to the world! Across Pernambuco, there used to be nine cases of microcephaly a year. Since the beginning of August 2015, more than 1,400 suspected cases have been notified. And the Zika season is likely to start again – the rainy season brings water, and the mosquitoes lay their eggs in any little bit of water they can find.

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What is your research trying to find?

We’ve got three studies underway. The first is examining the causes of microcephaly – the strongest hypothesis is Zika infection, but we need to be completely sure. The second is to identify the exact risks to women in terms of the stage of pregnancy they are at when exposed to Zika. And the third is to see how the babies develop.

How do the trials work?

We’re in very close contact with maternity hospitals across the state. So for the first study, when a baby with microcephaly is born, we’ll interview the mothers about Zika exposure during pregnancy and collect blood samples (when possible from the umbilical cord), measure the head circumference and get CT scans of the baby. We also follow the same process for a control sample of similar babies born without microcephaly. We’re also studying some babies who have already been born with microcephaly.

For the second study, we’re recruiting pregnant women who get the kind of rash associated with Zika. We investigate them for Zika, dengue and chikungunya [viruses all spread by the Aedes mosquito]. Then we follow them to establish what proportion will have a miscarriage or a stillbirth, and what proportion have a baby with microcephaly or other malformations. That will tell us how common microcephaly really is and how it is affected by the trimester in which the mother becomes infected.

For the third study, we want to track the babies’ developmental delays – looking at things like whether they have convulsions and how they interact or make eye contact.

How did you get involved?

I’m the lead for collaborations with Brazil at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. I’m Brazilian myself: I trained here, went to London for postgraduate studies and remained here for the rest of my career. When the epidemic started, the government asked a group of epidemiologists in Pernambuco to think about research projects. They called me, I talked to them, and the Brazilian Ministry of Health invited me to come. The government gave us enough money for one of the studies, and we’re raising money for the others.

Who are you working with?

Our group is based at the local branch of the Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, which is a large research institute funded by the government. They’ve given us their boardroom, which we have to vacate if there’s a meeting. We have 10 professionals in our group and 14 health visitors who go out to hospitals or take a van to visit women at home (although two of them are off sick with Zika at the moment). We’re working very closely with the hospitals, and with the State of Pernambuco Department of Health.

What are you hoping to achieve?

I think the key thing is finding out when people are most vulnerable to Zika, and what proportion of babies is affected. If it turns out that 90% of women who get infected with Zika at a particular critical stage of pregnancy have an affected baby, as happens with rubella, then there’s good reason to start thinking about a treatment as well as a vaccine – or maybe the option for women to have access to a legal termination. The other aspect in those decisions is how severe the children’s disabilities are going to be.

What’s the mood like?

When I was first here in November, it felt a little like Europe during the plague – there was this very scary new health trend, and people didn’t really know what was causing it. The government has done a good job getting information out there, but there’s a lot of concern.

The families are very worried. The state has set up centres for pregnant women to self-report for investigation and notification: over 1,000 presented in the last two months. But there is no treatment, abortions are illegal in Brazil, so once a person is pregnant and infected, there’s nothing that can be done.

In our team, we’re obviously very sad for the mothers and the kids, but this gives our work a sense of urgency.

This article was first published on the Wellcome Trust blog and is published here under a Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 licence. The Wellcome Trust has provided initial funding for Professor Rodrigues’s work.

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