| Literature DB >> 27965958 |
Douglas B Kell1, Louise C Kenny2.
Abstract
Preeclampsia (PE) is a complex, multisystem disorder that remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in pregnancy. Four main classes of dysregulation accompany PE and are widely considered to contribute to its severity. These are abnormal trophoblast invasion of the placenta, anti-angiogenic responses, oxidative stress, and inflammation. What is lacking, however, is an explanation of how these themselves are caused. We here develop the unifying idea, and the considerable evidence for it, that the originating cause of PE (and of the four classes of dysregulation) is, in fact, microbial infection, that most such microbes are dormant and hence resist detection by conventional (replication-dependent) microbiology, and that by occasional resuscitation and growth it is they that are responsible for all the observable sequelae, including the continuing, chronic inflammation. In particular, bacterial products such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS), also known as endotoxin, are well known as highly inflammagenic and stimulate an innate (and possibly trained) immune response that exacerbates the inflammation further. The known need of microbes for free iron can explain the iron dysregulation that accompanies PE. We describe the main routes of infection (gut, oral, and urinary tract infection) and the regularly observed presence of microbes in placental and other tissues in PE. Every known proteomic biomarker of "preeclampsia" that we assessed has, in fact, also been shown to be raised in response to infection. An infectious component to PE fulfills the Bradford Hill criteria for ascribing a disease to an environmental cause and suggests a number of treatments, some of which have, in fact, been shown to be successful. PE was classically referred to as endotoxemia or toxemia of pregnancy, and it is ironic that it seems that LPS and other microbial endotoxins really are involved. Overall, the recognition of an infectious component in the etiology of PE mirrors that for ulcers and other diseases that were previously considered to lack one.Entities:
Keywords: amyloidoses; biomarkers; coagulopathies; dormancy; infection; preeclampsia; sepsis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27965958 PMCID: PMC5126693 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2016.00060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Some known risk factors for preeclampsia [based on part in Ref. (.
| Risk factor | Comments | Selected reference |
|---|---|---|
| Nulliparous women | Epidemiological observation, suggested biochemical explanations include soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 (sFlt1):placental growth factor (PlGF) ratio | ( |
| Increased maternal age (especially >35 years) | Epidemiological observation, though may be related to existing age-related disease | ( |
| History of preeclampsia in previous pregnancy | Epidemiological observation, virtually akin to recurrence; among the strongest factors | ( |
| Multi-fetal gestation, i.e., twins, etc. | Extra demands on mother’s circulation; larger placenta, danger of ischemia? Relative risk ~3.5× in nulliparous | ( |
| Obesity (especially BMI > 35) | Can affect blood pressure (BP) directly, also | ( |
| Booking diastolic BP > 80 mm Hg | An essential part of the later syndrome | ( |
| Booking proteinuria on at least 1 occasion, or ≥0.3 g/24 h | An essential part of the later syndrome | ( |
| Family history of preeclampsia (mother or sister) | Twofold to fivefold increase in likelihood. Genetic factors are said to account for some 50% of the variance, though few properly controlled monozygotic/dizygotic twin studies exist; when done the heritability of PE can be lower to negligible | ( |
| Pre-existing medical conditions, including chronic hypertension, diabetes mellitus, antiphospholipid syndrome, thrombophilia, autoimmune disease, renal disease, systemic lupus erythematosus, and infertility | These are mainly seen as (other) vascular diseases or comorbidities; however, antiphospholipid antibodies (Hughes’ syndrome) are of special interest as they can have an infectious origin; one-third of women with them will develop PE, and they cause recurrent pregnancy loss | ( |
| Urinary tract infection (UTI) | An infectious origin for PE is the focus here, and not just from UTI | ( |
See also .
Figure 1Two main sources (fetal and maternal) can drive a pregnancy toward preeclampsia.
Figure 2There are four main “causes” of preeclampsia, represented by the colored outer circles, and these can also interact with each other. That part of the figure is redrawn from Pennington et al. (113). In addition, we note here, as the theme of this review, that microbes can themselves cause each of the features in the outer colored circles to manifest.
Figure 3Another detailed representation of factors known to cause or accompany PE, redrawn from Magee et al. (.
Figure 4A mind map of the overall structure of the review.
Figure 5The chief physiological macrostates exhibited by microorganisms.
Figure 6An 11-stage systems biology model of the factors that we consider cause initially formant microbes to manifest the symptoms (and disease) of preeclampsia.
Many studies have identified a much greater prevalence of infectious agents in the blood or urine of these exhibiting PE than in matched controls.
| Microbes | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| IgG seroprevalence and gDNA associated with PE ( | ( | |
| IgG (but not IgA or IgM) associated with PE, OR = 3.1 | ( | |
| Significantly greater numbers with PE, and reversion under antichlamydial treatment | ( | |
| Increased risk of PE, OR = 7.2 or 1.6 based on serology | ( | |
| Cytomegalovirus | RR for PE 1.5 if infected with CMV | ( |
| Seropositivity or DNA. OR = 2.7 or | ( | |
| IgG seropositivity 54% PE vs. 21% controls | ( | |
| Anti-CagA antibodies cross-react with trophoblasts and could inhibit placentation | ( | |
| 2.8× greater seropositivity in PE group | ( | |
| OR = 2.86 for seropositivity in PE, correlated with high malondialdehyde levels | ( | |
| Wide-ranging review of many studies showing PE more prevalent after | ( | |
| Seropositivity PE:control = 84:32% ( | ( | |
| OR for seropositivity 1.83 ( | ( | |
| Seropositivity PE:control 86:43% ( | ( | |
| Human papillomavirus | High-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) presence implies an OR of 2.18 for PE | ( |
| Meta-analyses | Incidence of PE 19% with asymptomatic bacteriuria vs. 3% (primigravid) or 6% (multigravid) controls ( | ( |
| UTI more than twice as likely in severe preeclamptics than in controls | ( | |
| OR of 1.6 for PE if UTI present | ( | |
| Increased risk of PE OR 1.57 for UTI, 1.76 for periodontal disease | ( | |
| Early application of antibiotics in infection reduced PE by 52% | ( | |
| Any overt infection led to an RR of 2 for PE | ( | |
| UTI has OR of 3.2 for PE; OR = 4.3 if in third trimester | ( | |
| UTI has OR of 1.3 for mild/moderate and 1.8 for severe PE | ( | |
| Increased risk of PE with UTI (OR 1.22) or antibiotic prescription (OR 1.28) | ( | |
| OR of 6.8 for symptomatic bacteriuria in PE vs. controls | ( | |
| OR 1.3–1.8 of mild or severe PE if exposed to UTI | ( | |
| OR 1.4 for PE following UTI | ( | |
| OR 1.3 for PE after UTI | ( | |
| Meta-analyses showing associations between PD and PE | ( | |
| Indications that infection with malaria is associated with PE | ( | |
| 1.5 RR for PE if malarial | ( | |
| Seasonality: 5.4-fold increase in eclampsia during malaria season | ( | |
| Preeclampsia was significantly associated with malaria infection during pregnancy ( | ( |
Evidence for microbes in placental tissues, including those with PE.
| Organisms | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Multiple, including | Many more in PE placentas relative to controls ( | ( |
| Multiple | Half of second-trimester pregnancies have culturable or PCR-detectable bacteria/mycoplasmas | ( |
| Multiple | 38% of placental samples were positive for selected bacteria and viruses | ( |
| ( | ||
| Multiple | Detectable in 27% of all placentas and 54% of spontaneous preterm delivery | ( |
| Multiple | 16S/NGS, major review | ( |
| Multiple | From 16S and NGS analysis of placental tissue of 7 PE patients (12.5%) (controls all negative) | ( |
| When added | ( | |
| Multiple | Review, with some focus on preterm birth | ( |
| Multiple | Overview, some focus on preterm birth | ( |
| Multiple | Good recent overview, with possible implication of a physiological role | ( |
| Multiple | 320 placentas; changed microbiome as a function of excess gestational weight gain | ( |
| Multiple | One-third of placentas from preterm births were culture-positive | ( |
| Multiple | Major differences in placental microbiome in preterm birth | ( |
| Increased likelihood of PE | ( | |
| Reviews of placental malaria | ( | |
| OR of PE = | ( | |
| OR | ( | |
| OR | ( | |
| Meta-analysis | Widespread occurrence of microbes in female genital tract during pregnancy | ( |
Periodontal disease (PD) and preeclampsia.
| Organisms | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Meta-analyses | OR of PE increased 3.69-fold if PD before 32 weeks | ( |
| OR of 3 for the development of PE if ureaplasmas present at first antenatal visit | ( | |
| OR 5.56 for PD preceding PE | ( | |
| OR 2.1 for preceding PE | ( | |
| Extensive overview of role of oral health and periodontal disease in PE | ( | |
| OR 3.71 for PE if history of periodontal treatment | ( | |
| Excellent overview of likely relationship between PD and PE | ( | |
| OR = 8.6 or 2.03 for PE if PD was present vs. controls | ( | |
| Strong association between PD and PE ( | ( | |
| Overview with many references | ( | |
| OR for association between PD and PE = 3.73. No correlation with TNF-α or IL | ( | |
| OR 2.46 PE:controls | ( | |
| Excellent overviews, focusing on means of transport of microbes from mouth to reproductive tissue | ( | |
| Relationship between C-reactive protein, PE, and severity of PD | ( | |
| Adjusted PE RR 5.8 for Women with periodontal disease and CRP >75th percentile compared to women without periodontal disease | ( | |
| PD prevalence 65.5% and significantly higher ( | ( | |
| Meta-analysis | ( | |
| Periodontal bacteria “much more prevalent” in PE than controls, but OR not given | ( | |
| Overview, stressing role of LPS | ( | |
| Overview and meta-analysis of 25 studies | ( | |
| OR 4.79–6.6 for PE is PD | ( | |
| Its LPS inhibits trophoblast invasion | ( | |
| OR = 3 overall | ( | |
| Not stated | Significantly higher periodontal probing depth and clinical attachment level scores in the preeclamptic group compared with controls (2.98 vs. 2.11 and 3.33 vs. 2.30, respectively). | ( |
Examples of decreased PE following antibiotic therapies given for various reasons.
| Target organisms | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| HIV | OR of 0.65 for patients treated with mono- or triple antiretroviral therapy | ( |
| ( | ||
| Various organisms | 52% decrease in PE following 10-day antibiotic therapy | ( |
Molecular examples of bacterial antigens that can elicit antibodies that stop successful trophoblast implantation or stimulate parturition.
| Organism | Antigen and comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Gram-negatives | LPS can stimulate parturition, | ( |
| Gram-negatives | LPS can stimulate parturition, | ( |
| Anti-CagA antibodies cross-react with trophoblasts and could inhibit placentation | ( | |
| LPS inhibits trophoblast invasion | ( | |
| Various | Antiphospholipid antibodies (that can be induced by microbes, see above) | ( |
Figure 7Preeclampsia bears some similarities to and may be considered as a milder form of, the changes that occur during genuine sepsis leading to a systematic inflammatory response syndrome, septic shock, and multiple organ dysfunction.
Fourteen metabolites contributing to a preeclamptic “signature” (.
| Metabolite | Up or down in PE | Average mass (Da) | Chemspider identifier |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-hydroxytryptophan | Down | 220.225 | 141 |
| Monosaccharide | Up | Unspecified | Unspecified |
| Decanoylcarnitine | Up | 315.448 | 8420677 |
| Methylglutaric and/or adipic acid | Down | 146.141 | 11549/191 |
| Oleic acid | Up | 282.461 | 393217 |
| Docosahexaenoic acid and/or docosatriynoic acid | Up | 328.488 | 393183/absent |
| γ-Butyrolactone and/or oxolan-3-one (dihydrofuran-3-one) | Up | 86.089 | 7029/461367 |
| 2-Oxovaleric acid and/or oxo-methylbutanoic acid | Up | 116.115 | 67142/absent |
| Acetoacetic acid | Up | 102.089 | 94 |
| Hexadecenoyleicosatetraenoyl-sn-glycerol | Up | n/a | Absent |
| Di-(octadecadienoyl)-sn-glycerol | Up | 616.954 | 4942782 |
| Sphingosine-1-phosphate | Up | 379.472 | 4446673 |
| Sphinganine 1-phosphate | Up | 381.488 | 559277 |
| Vitamin D3 derivatives | Up | n/a | Unspecified |
Figure 8Some structures of various statins.