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Analysis of an Expanded Targeted Early Cytomegalovirus Testing Program.

OBJECTIVE: Determine the detection rate from an expanded targeted early cytomegalovirus (CMV) testing program implemented from a large healthcare system (Intermountain Healthcare, IHC).

STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review.

SETTING: Tertiary medical center.

METHODS: An electronic system was modified to include indications for testing whenever a provider placed an order for CMV testing. A retrospective analysis of this database was performed.

RESULTS: From March 1, 2021 to August 31, 2022, there were 3450 (8.8%) patients who underwent CMV testing out of 39,245 total live births within the IHC system. Since the formal implementation of this program in 2019, annual CMV testing has increased almost 10-fold: 2668 CMV tests were performed in 2021 compared to 289 CMV tests in 2015. The most frequent indication for congenital CMV (cCMV) testing was small for gestational age (SGA) (68.2%), followed by macrocephaly (13.5%), an abnormal hearing test (5.0%), and microcephaly (4.4%). Fourteen cCMV-infected infants were diagnosed all of them meeting the criteria for symptomatic cCMV. The most common indication resulting in a positive diagnosis was those who presented with SGA (n = 10 patients). The positivity rate would result in a prevalence of 35.7 symptomatic cCMV cases diagnosed per 100,000 live births, numbers comparable to those expected for universal cCMV screening.

CONCLUSION: An expanded targeted early cCMV testing program may improve detection rates of symptomatic cCMV cases and should be considered as a feasible alternative approach to universal or hearing-targeted early CMV testing.

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