IFPA Senior Award Lecture: making sense of pre-eclampsia - two placental causes of preeclampsia?

Incomplete spiral artery remodelling is the first of two stages of pre-eclampsia, typically of early onset. The second stage comprises dysregulated uteroplacental perfusion and placental oxidative stress. Oxidatively stressed syncytiotrophoblast (STB) over-secretes proteins that perturb maternal ang...

Popoln opis

Bibliografske podrobnosti
Main Authors: Redman, C, Sargent, I, Staff, A
Format: Journal article
Jezik:English
Izdano: 2014
_version_ 1826302653453303808
author Redman, C
Sargent, I
Staff, A
author_facet Redman, C
Sargent, I
Staff, A
author_sort Redman, C
collection OXFORD
description Incomplete spiral artery remodelling is the first of two stages of pre-eclampsia, typically of early onset. The second stage comprises dysregulated uteroplacental perfusion and placental oxidative stress. Oxidatively stressed syncytiotrophoblast (STB) over-secretes proteins that perturb maternal angiogenic balance and are considered to be pre-eclampsia biomarkers. We propose that, in addition and more fundamentally, these STB-derived proteins are biomarkers of a cellular (STB) stress response, which typically involves up-regulation of some proteins and down-regulation of others (positive and negative stress proteins respectively). Soluble vascular growth factor receptor-1 (sVEGFR-1) and reduced growth factor (PlGF) then exemplify positive and negative STB stress response proteins in the maternal circulation. Uncomplicated term pregnancy is associated with increasing sVEGFR-1 and decreasing PlGF, which can be interpreted as evidence of increasing STB stress. STB pathology, at or after term (for example focal STB necrosis) demonstrates this stress, with or without pre-eclampsia. We review the evidence that when placental growth reaches its limits at term, terminal villi become over-crowded with diminished intervillous pore size impeding intervillous perfusion with increasing intervillous hypoxia and STB stress. This type of STB stress has no antecedent pathology, so the fetuses are well-grown, as typifies late onset pre-eclampsia, and prediction is less effective than for the early onset syndrome because STB stress is a late event. In summary, abnormal placental perfusion and STB stress contribute to the pathogenesis of early and late onset pre-eclampsia. But the former has an extrinsic cause - poor placentation, whereas the latter has an intrinsic cause, 'microvillous overcrowding', as placental growth reaches its functional limits. This model explains important features of late pre-eclampsia and raises questions of how antecedent medical risk factors such as chronic hypertension affect early and late sub-types of the syndrome. It also implies that all pregnant women may be destined to get pre-eclampsia but spontaneous or induced delivery averts this outcome in most instances.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T05:50:51Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:e8d4614b-4ed5-4cc6-aa92-ccd90680d35d
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T05:50:51Z
publishDate 2014
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:e8d4614b-4ed5-4cc6-aa92-ccd90680d35d2022-03-27T10:49:39ZIFPA Senior Award Lecture: making sense of pre-eclampsia - two placental causes of preeclampsia?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e8d4614b-4ed5-4cc6-aa92-ccd90680d35dEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2014Redman, CSargent, IStaff, AIncomplete spiral artery remodelling is the first of two stages of pre-eclampsia, typically of early onset. The second stage comprises dysregulated uteroplacental perfusion and placental oxidative stress. Oxidatively stressed syncytiotrophoblast (STB) over-secretes proteins that perturb maternal angiogenic balance and are considered to be pre-eclampsia biomarkers. We propose that, in addition and more fundamentally, these STB-derived proteins are biomarkers of a cellular (STB) stress response, which typically involves up-regulation of some proteins and down-regulation of others (positive and negative stress proteins respectively). Soluble vascular growth factor receptor-1 (sVEGFR-1) and reduced growth factor (PlGF) then exemplify positive and negative STB stress response proteins in the maternal circulation. Uncomplicated term pregnancy is associated with increasing sVEGFR-1 and decreasing PlGF, which can be interpreted as evidence of increasing STB stress. STB pathology, at or after term (for example focal STB necrosis) demonstrates this stress, with or without pre-eclampsia. We review the evidence that when placental growth reaches its limits at term, terminal villi become over-crowded with diminished intervillous pore size impeding intervillous perfusion with increasing intervillous hypoxia and STB stress. This type of STB stress has no antecedent pathology, so the fetuses are well-grown, as typifies late onset pre-eclampsia, and prediction is less effective than for the early onset syndrome because STB stress is a late event. In summary, abnormal placental perfusion and STB stress contribute to the pathogenesis of early and late onset pre-eclampsia. But the former has an extrinsic cause - poor placentation, whereas the latter has an intrinsic cause, 'microvillous overcrowding', as placental growth reaches its functional limits. This model explains important features of late pre-eclampsia and raises questions of how antecedent medical risk factors such as chronic hypertension affect early and late sub-types of the syndrome. It also implies that all pregnant women may be destined to get pre-eclampsia but spontaneous or induced delivery averts this outcome in most instances.
spellingShingle Redman, C
Sargent, I
Staff, A
IFPA Senior Award Lecture: making sense of pre-eclampsia - two placental causes of preeclampsia?
title IFPA Senior Award Lecture: making sense of pre-eclampsia - two placental causes of preeclampsia?
title_full IFPA Senior Award Lecture: making sense of pre-eclampsia - two placental causes of preeclampsia?
title_fullStr IFPA Senior Award Lecture: making sense of pre-eclampsia - two placental causes of preeclampsia?
title_full_unstemmed IFPA Senior Award Lecture: making sense of pre-eclampsia - two placental causes of preeclampsia?
title_short IFPA Senior Award Lecture: making sense of pre-eclampsia - two placental causes of preeclampsia?
title_sort ifpa senior award lecture making sense of pre eclampsia two placental causes of preeclampsia
work_keys_str_mv AT redmanc ifpaseniorawardlecturemakingsenseofpreeclampsiatwoplacentalcausesofpreeclampsia
AT sargenti ifpaseniorawardlecturemakingsenseofpreeclampsiatwoplacentalcausesofpreeclampsia
AT staffa ifpaseniorawardlecturemakingsenseofpreeclampsiatwoplacentalcausesofpreeclampsia