AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to explore if issues with placental blood flow and maturation contribute to spontaneous preterm labor in pregnancies without acute inflammation.
  • It compared the placentas of 184 women with spontaneous preterm labor to 2,471 women with uncomplicated term pregnancies, finding a higher frequency of maternal vascular malperfusion and villous maturation abnormalities in the preterm group.
  • About 41% of the preterm cases showed placental maturation defects, suggesting these defects play a significant role in unexplained preterm deliveries.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To determine whether placental vascular pathology and impaired placental exchange due to maturational defects are involved in the etiology of spontaneous preterm labor and delivery in cases without histologic acute chorioamnionitis.

Methods: This was a retrospective, observational study. Cases included pregnancies that resulted in spontaneous preterm labor and delivery (<37 weeks), whereas uncomplicated pregnancies that delivered fetuses at term (≥37-42 weeks of gestation) were selected as controls. Placental histological diagnoses were classified into three groups: lesions of maternal vascular malperfusion, lesions of fetal vascular malperfusion, and placental microvasculopathy, and the frequency of each type of lesion in cases and controls was compared. Moreover, we specifically searched for villous maturational abnormalities in cases and controls. Doppler velocimetry of the umbilical and uterine arteries were performed in a subset of patients.

Results: There were 184 cases and 2471 controls, of which 95 and 1178 had Doppler studies, respectively. The frequency of lesions of maternal vascular malperfusion was greater in the placentas of patients with preterm labor than in the control group [14.1% (26/184) vs. 8.8% (217/2471) (p=0.023)]. Disorders of villous maturation were more frequent in the group with preterm labor than in the control group: 41.1% (39/95) [delayed villous maturation in 31.6% (30/95) vs. 2.5% (13/519) in controls and accelerated villous maturation in 9.5% (9/95) vs. none in controls].

Conclusions: Maturational defects of placental villi were associated with approximately 41% of cases of unexplained spontaneous preterm labor and delivery without acute inflammatory lesions of the placenta and with delivery of appropriate-for-gestational-age fetuses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9189066PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jpm-2021-0681DOI Listing

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