TY - JOUR
T1 - The zika virus individual participant data consortium
T2 - A global initiative to estimate the effects of exposure to zika virus during pregnancy on adverse fetal, infant, and child health outcomes
AU - Alger, Jackeline
AU - De Alencar Ximenes, Ricardo Arraes
AU - Avelino-Silva, Vivian I.
AU - Bardají, Azucena
AU - Mojica, Carlos Hernan Becerra
AU - Benedetti, Andrea
AU - De Lourdes Benamor Teixeira, Maria
AU - Bethencourt, Sarah
AU - Aburto, Victor Hugo Borja
AU - Brant, Fátima
AU - Brasil, Patrícia
AU - Brickley, Elizabeth B.
AU - Broutet, Nathalie
AU - Buekens, Pierre
AU - Cafferata, Mariá Luisa
AU - Calvet, Guilherme
AU - Campbell, Harlan
AU - Carabali, Mabel
AU - Chan, Derrick
AU - Costa, Federico
AU - Da Costa Ferreira, Orlando
AU - Coutinho, Conrado Milani
AU - Cunha, Antonio Jose
AU - Cure, Carlos Cure
AU - Damen, Johanna A.A.
AU - De Jong, Valentijn M.T.
AU - Debray, Thomas P.
AU - DeBiasi, Roberta L.
AU - Diaz-Martinez, Luis Alfonso
AU - Duarte, Geraldo
AU - Ferriol, Diana Mariá
AU - Ganz, Jucelia S.
AU - Gérardin, Patrick
AU - Gilboa, Suzanne M.
AU - Gonzalez, Maritza
AU - Muñiz, Concepción Grajales
AU - Gustafson, Paul
AU - Sanchez, Luz Angela Gutierrez
AU - Guzmán, Mariá G.
AU - Hofer, Cristina
AU - Holband, Natanael
AU - Inwani, Irene
AU - Jaenisch, Thomas
AU - João, Esaú
AU - Juliana, Amadu
AU - Kara, Edna
AU - Kim, Caron
AU - Ko, Albert I.
AU - Koopmans, Marion
AU - Moons, Karel G.M.
PY - 2020/9/30
Y1 - 2020/9/30
N2 - This commentary describes the creation of the Zika Virus Individual Participant Data Consortium, a global collaboration to address outstanding questions in Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemiology through conducting an individual participant data meta-analysis (IPD-MA). The aims of the IPD-MA are to (1) estimate the absolute and relative risks of miscarriage, fetal loss, and short- and long-term sequelae of fetal exposure; (2) identify and quantify the relative importance of different sources of heterogeneity (e.g., immune profiles, concurrent flavivirus infection) for the risk of adverse fetal, infant, and child outcomes among infants exposed to ZIKV in utero; and (3) develop and validate a prognostic model for the early identification of high-risk pregnancies and inform communication between health care providers and their patients and public health interventions (e.g., vector control strategies, antenatal care, and family planning programs). By leveraging data from a diversity of populations across the world, the IPD-MA will provide a more precise estimate of the risk of adverse ZIKV-related outcomes within clinically relevant subgroups and a quantitative assessment of the generalizability of these estimates across populations and settings. The ZIKV IPD Consortium effort is indicative of the growing recognition that data sharing is a central component of global health security and outbreak response.
AB - This commentary describes the creation of the Zika Virus Individual Participant Data Consortium, a global collaboration to address outstanding questions in Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemiology through conducting an individual participant data meta-analysis (IPD-MA). The aims of the IPD-MA are to (1) estimate the absolute and relative risks of miscarriage, fetal loss, and short- and long-term sequelae of fetal exposure; (2) identify and quantify the relative importance of different sources of heterogeneity (e.g., immune profiles, concurrent flavivirus infection) for the risk of adverse fetal, infant, and child outcomes among infants exposed to ZIKV in utero; and (3) develop and validate a prognostic model for the early identification of high-risk pregnancies and inform communication between health care providers and their patients and public health interventions (e.g., vector control strategies, antenatal care, and family planning programs). By leveraging data from a diversity of populations across the world, the IPD-MA will provide a more precise estimate of the risk of adverse ZIKV-related outcomes within clinically relevant subgroups and a quantitative assessment of the generalizability of these estimates across populations and settings. The ZIKV IPD Consortium effort is indicative of the growing recognition that data sharing is a central component of global health security and outbreak response.
KW - Congenital Zika syndrome
KW - Data sharing
KW - Emerging pathogen
KW - Individual participant data meta-analysis
KW - Microcephaly
KW - Prediction model
KW - Prognostic model
KW - Zika virus
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85093660377&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/tropicalmed5040152
DO - 10.3390/tropicalmed5040152
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85093660377
VL - 5
SP - 152
EP - 160
JO - Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
JF - Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
IS - 4
ER -