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NOTE: A surveillance case definition is a set of uniform criteria used to define a disease for public health surveillance. Surveillance case definitions enable public health officials to classify and count cases consistently across reporting jurisdictions. Surveillance case definitions are not intended to be used by healthcare providers for making a clinical diagnosis or determining how to meet an individual patient’s health needs.

Subtype(s)

  • Zika virus disease and Zika virus infection
  • Zika virus disease, non-congenital
  • Zika virus infection, congenital
  • Zika virus infection, non-congenital

Clinical Criteria

Liveborn infant with congenital microcephaly, or intracranial calcifications, or structural brain or eye abnormalities, or other congenital central nervous system-related abnormalities not explained by another etiology.

(As part of the complete evaluation of congenital microcephaly or other central nervous system [CNS] birth defects, testing for other congenital infections such as syphilis, toxoplasmosis, rubella, cytomegalovirus infection, lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection, and herpes simplex virus infections should be considered. An assessment of potential genetic and other teratogenic causes of the congenital anomalies should also be performed.)

Subtype(s) Case Definition

Case Classification

Probable

A neonate meets clinical criteria for congenital disease; AND
The neonate’s mother has an epidemiologic linkage or meets laboratory criteria for recent ZIKV or flavivirus infection; AND
The neonate has laboratory evidence of ZIKV or flavivirus infection by:

  • Positive ZIKV IgM antibody test of serum or CSF collected within 2 days of birth; AND
    • positive neutralizing antibody titers against ZIKV and dengue or other flaviviruses endemic to the region where exposure occurred; OR
    • negative dengue virus IgM antibody test and no neutralizing antibody testing performed.

Confirmed

A neonate meets the clinical criteria for congenital disease AND meets one of the following laboratory criteria:

  • ZIKV detection by culture, viral antigen, or viral RNA in fetal tissue, umbilical cord blood, or amniotic fluid; or neonatal serum, CSF, or urine collected within 2 days of birth; OR
  • Positive ZIKV IgM antibody test of umbilical cord blood, neonatal serum or CSF collected within 2 days of birth with positive ZIKV neutralizing antibody titers and negative neutralizing antibody titers against dengue or other flaviviruses endemic to the region where exposure occurred.

Related Case Definition(s)