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Clinical Evidence and Methodology

EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS

Clinical Reference Hub

Curated insights • How it Works • Practical Pearls • Evidence Base

CLINICAL INSIGHT

When to Use

When to Use

  • Differential diagnosis for symmetric Intrauterine Growth Restriction (IUGR).
  • Evaluation of fetal anomalies on ultrasound (e.g., intracranial calcifications, microcephaly, hydrops).
  • Screening pregnant patients with concerning exposures or viral prodromes (fever, lymphadenopathy, rash).
  • Workup for unexplained stillbirth or neonatal jaundice/thrombocytopenia.

Exclusion Criteria

The TORCH framework is a screening heuristic. It is not a single "test" but a diagnostic approach. Routine universal TORCH screening in asymptomatic patients is not cost-effective and is generally discouraged by ACOG.

CLINICAL INSIGHT

How it Works

The Acronym Breakdown

T
O
R
C
H

Pathophysiology

These agents share the ability to cross the placenta (hematogenous spread) or infect the fetus via the birth canal (ascending/contact spread). The severity of fetal impact is generally inversely proportional to the gestational age at the time of primary maternal infection.

CLINICAL INSIGHT

Practical Pearls

Diagnostic Pearls

  • CMV: The most common congenital infection; look for periventricular calcifications on US.
  • Toxoplasmosis: Classically presents with the triad of chorioretinitis, hydrocephalus, and intracranial calcifications (diffuse, unlike CMV).
  • Syphilis: Rising incidence; check RPR/VDRL at first visit and again at 28 weeks in high-risk areas.
  • HSV: Risk of transmission is highest (30–50%) during a primary outbreak at the time of delivery; recurrent outbreaks carry <1% risk.

Serology Pitfalls

  • IgM false positives are common; always confirm with IgG avidity testing if available.
  • Low IgG avidity suggests a primary infection within the last 3–4 months.
  • Do not wait for seroconversion in HSV; if lesions are present, treat empirically and consider C-section.

Common US Findings

Intracranial Calcifications
Hydrops Fetalis
Limb Hypoplasia
Hepatomegaly
CLINICAL INSIGHT

Next Steps

Next Steps for Positive Maternal Serology

  • Determine timing of infection via IgG avidity or serial titers.
  • Refer to Maternal-Fetal Medicine (MFM) for detailed anatomy ultrasound.
  • Consider amniocentesis for PCR (wait at least 6-8 weeks post-infection and after 21 weeks gestation for CMV).
  • Initiate pathogen-specific therapy (e.g., Spiramycin/Pyrimethamine for Toxo, Penicillin for Syphilis).

Delivery Considerations

Active HSV lesions or prodromal symptoms at the time of labor are an absolute indication for Cesarean delivery to prevent neonatal HSV.

CLINICAL INSIGHT

Evidence Base

Key Citations

Practice Bulletin No. 151: Cytomegalovirus, Parvovirus B19, Varicella Zoster, and Toxoplasmosis in Pregnancy.

ACOGObstetrics & Gynecology2015

Congenital cytomegalovirus infection: antenatal and postnatal considerations.

Kimberlin DW, et al.Clinical Microbiology Reviews2013
CLINICAL INSIGHT

Background

History of the Acronym

The acronym was coined in 1971 by André Nahmias to group infections that presented with similar clinical features in the neonate. While the "Other" category has expanded significantly, the framework remains the primary teaching tool for perinatal infectious diseases.

TORCH Framework

TORCH Screening Framework

Indications & Diagnostic Rationales

T

Toxoplasmosis

O

Other (Syphilis)

R

Rubella

C

CMV

H

HSV

Diagnostic Triggers

Maternal Exposure

Known contact with primary infection (especially Rubella/VZV).

Ultrasound Markers

Intracranial calcifications, Hydrops, Organomegaly, Microcephaly.

Seroconversion

Rising IgG or presence of IgM with low Avidity.

Fetal Growth

Severe early-onset Fetal Growth Restriction (<20 weeks).

Clinical Ref: Routine "Panel" testing is discouraged by FIGO/RCOG due to high false-positive rates. Testing should be serial and pathogen-specific based on clinical suspicion.

EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS

Clinical Reference Hub

Curated insights • How it Works • Practical Pearls • Evidence Base

CLINICAL INSIGHT

When to Use

When to Use

  • Differential diagnosis for symmetric Intrauterine Growth Restriction (IUGR).
  • Evaluation of fetal anomalies on ultrasound (e.g., intracranial calcifications, microcephaly, hydrops).
  • Screening pregnant patients with concerning exposures or viral prodromes (fever, lymphadenopathy, rash).
  • Workup for unexplained stillbirth or neonatal jaundice/thrombocytopenia.

Exclusion Criteria

The TORCH framework is a screening heuristic. It is not a single "test" but a diagnostic approach. Routine universal TORCH screening in asymptomatic patients is not cost-effective and is generally discouraged by ACOG.

CLINICAL INSIGHT

How it Works

The Acronym Breakdown

T
O
R
C
H

Pathophysiology

These agents share the ability to cross the placenta (hematogenous spread) or infect the fetus via the birth canal (ascending/contact spread). The severity of fetal impact is generally inversely proportional to the gestational age at the time of primary maternal infection.

CLINICAL INSIGHT

Practical Pearls

Diagnostic Pearls

  • CMV: The most common congenital infection; look for periventricular calcifications on US.
  • Toxoplasmosis: Classically presents with the triad of chorioretinitis, hydrocephalus, and intracranial calcifications (diffuse, unlike CMV).
  • Syphilis: Rising incidence; check RPR/VDRL at first visit and again at 28 weeks in high-risk areas.
  • HSV: Risk of transmission is highest (30–50%) during a primary outbreak at the time of delivery; recurrent outbreaks carry <1% risk.

Serology Pitfalls

  • IgM false positives are common; always confirm with IgG avidity testing if available.
  • Low IgG avidity suggests a primary infection within the last 3–4 months.
  • Do not wait for seroconversion in HSV; if lesions are present, treat empirically and consider C-section.

Common US Findings

Intracranial Calcifications
Hydrops Fetalis
Limb Hypoplasia
Hepatomegaly
CLINICAL INSIGHT

Next Steps

Next Steps for Positive Maternal Serology

  • Determine timing of infection via IgG avidity or serial titers.
  • Refer to Maternal-Fetal Medicine (MFM) for detailed anatomy ultrasound.
  • Consider amniocentesis for PCR (wait at least 6-8 weeks post-infection and after 21 weeks gestation for CMV).
  • Initiate pathogen-specific therapy (e.g., Spiramycin/Pyrimethamine for Toxo, Penicillin for Syphilis).

Delivery Considerations

Active HSV lesions or prodromal symptoms at the time of labor are an absolute indication for Cesarean delivery to prevent neonatal HSV.

CLINICAL INSIGHT

Evidence Base

Key Citations

Practice Bulletin No. 151: Cytomegalovirus, Parvovirus B19, Varicella Zoster, and Toxoplasmosis in Pregnancy.

ACOGObstetrics & Gynecology2015

Congenital cytomegalovirus infection: antenatal and postnatal considerations.

Kimberlin DW, et al.Clinical Microbiology Reviews2013
CLINICAL INSIGHT

Background

History of the Acronym

The acronym was coined in 1971 by André Nahmias to group infections that presented with similar clinical features in the neonate. While the "Other" category has expanded significantly, the framework remains the primary teaching tool for perinatal infectious diseases.