| Literature DB >> 30429667 |
Panagiotis Paliogiannis1, Angelo Zinellu1, Arduino A Mangoni2, Giampiero Capobianco3, Salvatore Dessole3, Pier Luigi Cherchi3, Ciriaco Carru1.
Abstract
Anisocytosis has been associated with the severity and prognosis of several acute and chronic diseases, as well as physiological conditions such as pregnancy. Anisocytosis is quantified by the red blood cell distribution width (RDW), expressed as the ratio, multiplied by 100, between the standard deviation (SD) of red blood cell volumes and the mean corpuscular volume, or as the SD of erythrocyte volumes (RDW-SD). The aim of the present review was to report the state of the art on the physiological values and the putative diagnostic and prognostic roles of RDW in complicated pregnancy. Literature research for articles published in the last ten years was conducted in Pubmed, Web of Science, ClinicalTrials.gov, and Scopus databases. Abstracts were independently screened by two investigators. If relevant, full articles were retrieved. References, in these articles, citing relevant reviews or original studies were also accessed to identify additional eligible studies. Any disagreement between the reviewers was resolved by a third investigator. A total of 28 studies were included in the review. These studies reported changes in RDW values during physiological pregnancy, and associations between the RDW and several pregnancy complications including anaemia, preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, and recurrent miscarriage. This review provides background information for establishing physiological and pathological RDW values in pregnancy for diagnostic and prognostic use in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: RDW; anisocytosis; gestational diabetes; preeclampsia; pregnancy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30429667 PMCID: PMC6214699 DOI: 10.11613/BM.2018.030502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Med (Zagreb) ISSN: 1330-0962 Impact factor: 2.313
Figure 1Flow chart of the search strategy followed for the selection of the articles included in the review
Studies investigating the role of RDW in pregnancy complications
| Sultana | P | 77 non-IDA and 113 with IDA | NA |
| Abdelrahman | P | 137 non-IDA and 57 with IDA | NA |
| Tiwari et al. 2013, India ( | P | 48 with anaemia (34 IDA) and 52 non-anaemic, 2nd and 3rd trimester | NA |
| Tasneem | P | 27 non-IDA women | 19.3% ± 10.0 |
| Bresani Salvi | P | 139 with anaemia, 2nd - 3rd trimester, and iron supply | NA |
| Schoorl | P | 25 IDA, 3rd trimester, before and after iron supplements | 45.0 fL ± 3.6 |
| De Sà | P | 29 anaemic mothers and their new-borns (N = 26) in comparison to non-anaemic mothers (N = 25) and their new-borns (N = 24) | anaemic mothers: |
| Kurt | P | 52 PE women | 14.1% ± 1.1 |
| Abdullahi | P | 65 PE women | 14.5% ± 1.8 |
| Gezer | R | 137 PE women, 150 healthy controls | 14.3% ± 2.7 |
| Reddy | P | 143 (76 mild and 67 severe) PE women | 18.0% ± 3.4 |
| Yücel and Ustun, 2017, Turkey ( | R | 109 (27 mild PE and 82 severe) PE women | 13.6% |
| Yilmaz | R | 118 PE women | 15.2% ± 1.96 |
| Sen-yu and Chao, 2016, China ( | R | 149 PE women | 13.1% ± 2.3 |
| Erdogan | R | 68 women with GD | 14.4% |
| Yildiz | P | 53 women with GD | 15.6% ± 1.1 |
| Cheng | P | 118 GD women with high ACR, 216 GD controls | 13.6% ± 0.9 |
| Yayla Abide | R | 84 ICP women | 15.1% ± 2.7 |
| Yilmaz | P | 90 ICP women | 14.2% ± 1.71 |
| Dundar | R | 60 women with miscarriage history | 16.3% ± 4.6 |
| Yilmaz | R | 120 women with recurrent miscarriage | 13.8% ± 1.4 |
| Ilhan | R | 14 women with AP | 48.9 fL ± 6.8 |
| Yayla Abide | P | 46 women with histologically diagnosed PIA | 15.1% ± 1.8 |
| Beyazit | P | 54 women with HEG | 12.1% ± 1.4 |
| Akkaya | R | 93 women with EP and MTX therapy | 12.5% ± 1.8 |