Laboratory testing for cytomegalovirus among pregnant women in the United States: A retrospective study using administrative claims data

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Abstract

Background: Routine cytomegalovirus (CMV) screening during pregnancy is not recommended in the United States and the extent to which it is performed is unknown. Using a medical claims database, we computed rates of CMV-specific testing among pregnant women.Methods: We used medical claims from the 2009 Truven Health MarketScan® Commercial databases. We computed CMV-specific testing rates using CPT codes.Results: We identified 77,773 pregnant women, of whom 1,668 (2%) had a claim for CMV-specific testing. CMV-specific testing was significantly associated with older age, Northeast or urban residence, and a diagnostic code for mononucleosis. We identified 44 women with a diagnostic code for mononucleosis, of whom 14% had CMV-specific testing.Conclusions: Few pregnant women had CMV-specific testing, suggesting that screening for CMV infection during pregnancy is not commonly performed. In the absence of national surveillance for CMV infections during pregnancy, healthcare claims are a potential source for monitoring practices of CMV-specific testing. © 2012 Leung et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Leung, J., Cannon, M. J., Grosse, S. D., & Bialek, S. R. (2012). Laboratory testing for cytomegalovirus among pregnant women in the United States: A retrospective study using administrative claims data. BMC Infectious Diseases, 12. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-12-334

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