| Literature DB >> 32785181 |
Daan R M G Ophelders1,2, Ruth Gussenhoven1, Luise Klein1,3, Reint K Jellema1, Rob J J Westerlaken1,2, Matthias C Hütten1,2, Jeroen Vermeulen4, Guido Wassink5, Alistair J Gunn5, Tim G A M Wolfs1,2.
Abstract
With a worldwide incidence of 15 million cases, preterm birth is a major contributor to neonatal mortality and morbidity, and concomitant social and economic burden Preterm infants are predisposed to life-long neurological disorders due to the immaturity of the brain. The risks are inversely proportional to maturity at birth. In the majority of extremely preterm infants (<28 weeks' gestation), perinatal brain injury is associated with exposure to multiple inflammatory perinatal triggers that include antenatal infection (i.e., chorioamnionitis), hypoxia-ischemia, and various postnatal injurious triggers (i.e., oxidative stress, sepsis, mechanical ventilation, hemodynamic instability). These perinatal insults cause a self-perpetuating cascade of peripheral and cerebral inflammation that plays a critical role in the etiology of diffuse white and grey matter injuries that underlies a spectrum of connectivity deficits in survivors from extremely preterm birth. This review focuses on chorioamnionitis and hypoxia-ischemia, which are two important antenatal risk factors for preterm brain injury, and highlights the latest insights on its pathophysiology, potential treatment, and future perspectives to narrow the translational gap between preclinical research and clinical applications.Entities:
Keywords: annexin A1; biomarkers; chorioamnionitis; erythropoietin; hypoxia-ischemia; preterm brain injury; stem cells; therapeutic hypothermia; timing
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32785181 PMCID: PMC7464163 DOI: 10.3390/cells9081871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Annexin A1 (ANXA1) expression over time in response to intra-amniotic lipopolysaccharide (LPS) exposure in the vasculature of the fetal brain parenchyma and the choroid plexus. (A) Integrated density (mean grey value of stained area*percentage of the stained area) of ANXA1 immunoreactivity in the cerebrovasculature. (B) The integrated density of ANXA1 expression within the vasculature of the choroid plexus. (C) Representative picture of ANXA1 expression within the blood vessels within the brain parenchyma of coronal sections containing the hippocampus; 200× magnification, scale bar 50 µm. (D) Representative picture of ANXA1 within the blood vessels of the choroid plexus; 400× magnification, scale bar 50 µm. Data are presented as mean/standard error of the mean and the Kruskal–Wallis test was performed: p < 0.05 = *, p < 0.1 = #.
Overview of the clinical and preclinical studies for treatment (cell-based, antibodies, drugs) of vulnerable preterm neonates.
| Setup | Model/Clinical Setting | Main Findings | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| HI + HT |
HT ↓mortality or major neurodevelopmental disability to 18 months of age and in survivors HT should be instituted in term and late preterm infants with moderate-to-severe hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy if identified before 6 h of age | [ | |
| HI + HT |
HT ↓ death or cases of an IQ score below 70 (47% vs. 58%;) HT ↓ death (28% vs. 44%) HT ↓ death or severe disability (41% vs. 60%) | [ | ||
| HI + HT |
The positive predictive value of a severely abnormal aEEG assessed by the voltage and pattern methods was 0.63 and 0.59 respectively in non-cooled infants and 0.55 and 0.51 in cooled infants | [ | ||
| HI + HT |
Hypothermia-associated complications in 90% of infants More prevalent white matter injury in cooled preterm infants compared to cooled term neonates | [ | ||
| HI + HT |
HT protects O4+ cells HT ↓ of microglia and Ki67+ cells in the periventricular white matter | [ | ||
| HI + HT |
HT ↑ EEG spectral frequency, but not total intensity HT ↓ loss of immature oligodendrocytes in periventricular white matter HT ↓ neuronal loss in hippocampus and basal ganglia HT ↓ of microglia and caspase-3 | [ | ||
| LPS i.p. + left carotid artery occlusion + HT |
HT not protective in LPS-sensitized brains | [ | ||
| PAM3CSK4 i.p. + left carotid artery occlusion + HT |
HT neuroprotective in presence of Gram-positive infection | [ | ||
|
| Intracranial ibotenate + hUCB-MNCs i.p./i.v. |
hUCB-MN i.p. did not reach systemic circulation; high amounts induced a detrimental systemic and cerebral inflammatory response hUCB-MN i.v. no effect on lesion size, microglial activation, astroglial cell density, cell proliferation in white matter or cortical plate | [ | |
| HI + MSC i.v. |
MSC i.v. ↓ microglial proliferation, ↓ loss of oligodendrocytes, ↓ demyelination, ↓ electrographic seizure activity, peripheral T-cell tolerance, ↓T-cell invasion into the brain | [ | ||
| HI + MAPC i.v. |
MAPC i.v. ↓number of seizures, prevented decrease in baroreceptor reflex sensitivity after global HI, ↓ microglial proliferation, prevention of hypomyelination, modulation of the peripheral splenic inflammatory response | [ | ||
| HI + hAECs i.n. |
hAECs↑ brain weight, ↑restoration of immature/mature OLs and ↑ myelin basic protein, ↓ microglia and astrogliosis, partially improved cortical EEG frequency distribution, ↓ loss of cortical area,↓ cleaved-caspase-3 expression, ↑neuronal survival in deep grey matter nuclei | [ | ||
| IVH +UCBC i.c.v. |
UCBCs ↓ post-hemorrhagic hydrocephalus development, ↓astrogliosis, ↓cell death, ↓expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines in CSF, ↑corpus-callosal thickness, ↑myelin basic protein expression, ↑behavioral tests vs. IVH group | [ | ||
| IVH + UCBC i.c.v. |
No infant died or showed serious adverse effects related with stem cell transplantation | [ | ||
| Unilateral HI + MAPC i.v./i.c.v. |
i.v. or intracerebral MAPC ↑ motor and neurologic score, hippocampal cell preservation vs. veh group | [ | ||
|
| LPS i.p. + MSC-EV i.p. |
MSC-EV ↓ inflammation-induced neuronal and cellular degeneration, astrogliosis and microgliosis, ↑ restoration of short-term and long-term microstructural abnormalities, long-lasting cognitive functions | [ | |
| HI + MSC-EV i.v. |
MSC-EV ↑ brain function measured by ↓ total numbers and duration of seizures, preserved baroreceptor reflex sensitivity, tendency to prevent hypomyelination | [ | ||
| LPS i.p. + HI + MSC i.n. |
MSC-EVs reach frontal part of the brain after 30 min and distribute within 3 h over the whole brain MSC-EV↓ neuronal cell death, ↑myelination, oligodendrocyte and neuron cell counts, neurodevelopmental outcome vs. perinatal brain injury | [ | ||
|
| Carotid occlusion + anti-IL-6 antibody i.v. |
Anti-IL-6 antibody ↓ cerebral IL-6 protein concentrations, ↑ BBB integrity and modulates tight-junction proteins | [ | |
| LPS i.v. + TNF-α antibody i.v. |
Anti-TNF-α delayed the rise in circulating IL-6, prolonged the increase in IL-10, attenuated EEG suppression, hypotension and tachycardia after LPS boluses, ↓ gliosis, ↑ TNF-positive cells, proliferation, total oligodendrocytes | [ | ||
| Carotid occlusion + anti-IL-1β antibody i.v. |
Anti-IL-1β antibody ↓ cerebral IL-1β protein concentrations (P < 0.03) and protein expressions ( | [ | ||
| Carotid occlusion + anti-IL-1β antibody i.v. |
Anti-IL-1β antibodies ↓ ( Anti-IL-1β antibodies does not affect myelination and astrogliosis | [ | ||
| Carotid occlusion + anti-IL-1β antibody i.v. |
Anti-IL-1β antibody ↓ blood-to-brain transport of radiolabeled IL-1β ( | [ | ||
|
| Unilateral HI + hrEPO i.p. |
hrEPO ↑revascularization in the ischemic hemisphere, ↓infarct volume, ↑neurological outcome, neurogenesis in the subventricular zone and migration of neuronal progenitors into ischemic cortex and striatum | [ | |
| Unilateral HI + hrEPO i.p. |
hrEPO ↑ oligodendrogenesis and maturation of oligodendrocytes, neurogenesis, behavioral neurological outcome 14 d after HI, ↓ white matter injury hrEPO did not reduce brain volume loss | [ | ||
| Unilateral HI + hrEPO s.c. |
hrEpo treatment ↓ brain injury, apoptosis, and gliosis, in a dose-dependent U-shaped manner at both 48 h and one week Three doses of hrEPO (5000 U/kg) was optimal providing maximal benefit with limited total exposure | [ | ||
| Unilateral HI + hrEPO i.p. |
Therapeutic benefit of EPO when given immediately following induction of HI injury Diminished benefit from a 60-min-delayed injection of EPO and no protection following a 180-min-delayed injection | [ | ||
| PVL (ibotenic acid intra-cranial) + EPO |
Single dose of EPO is sufficient to reduce excitotoxic brain injury Therapeutic window of <4 h for EPO Minor hematopoietic effects were observed following EPO treatment | [ | ||
| HI (UCO) + hrEPO i.v. |
hrEPO ↓reduced neuronal loss, numbers of caspase-3-positive cells in the striatal caudate nucleus, CA3 and dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, and thalamic medial nucleus↑ total, but not immature/mature oligodendrocytes in white matter tracts, cell proliferation, ↓ microgliosis and astrogliosis, seizure burden with more rapid recovery of electroencephalogram power, spectral edge frequency, and carotid blood flow | [ | ||
| LPS i.v. + hrEPO i.v. |
hrEPO did not improve fetal hypoxemia, hypotension induced by LPS hrEPO ↓ brain injury ↑ myelination in the corticospinal tract and the optic nerve | [ | ||
| Extreme/very preterm + hrEPO |
rhEPO ↓ rate of moderate/severe neurological disability in the placebo group (22 of 309, 7.1% vs. 57 of 304, 18.8%, Repeated low-dose rhEPO treatment ↓ the risk of long-term neurological disability in very preterm infants with no obvious adverse effects | [ | ||
| Extreme preterm + hrEPO |
No significant difference between the EPO group and the placebo group in the incidence of death or severe neurodevelopmental impairment at two years of age (97 children (6%) vs. 94 children (26%); relative risk, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.81 to 1.32; High-dose EPO treatment administered to extremely preterm infants from 24 h after birth through 32 weeks of postmenstrual age did not result in a lower risk of severe neurodevelopmental impairment or death at two years of age | [ |
Abbreviations: aEEG: amplitude-integrated electroencephalography, CI: confidence interval, d: day(s), EEG: electroencephalography, GA: gestational age, HI: hypoxia-ischemia, HT: hypothermia, hAECs: human amnion epithelial cells, h: hour(s), hrEPO: human recombinant erythropoietin, UCB-MNCs: human umbilical cord blood mononuclear cells, IL: interleukin, i.c.v.: intracerebroventricular, i.n.: intra nasal, i.p.: intraperitoneal, i.v.: intravenous, NT: normothermia, TNF: tumor necrosis factor, veh: vehicle.
Overview of the clinical and preclinical studies of diagnostic modalities (biomarker, imaging) for vulnerable neonates born preterm.
| Setup | Model/Clinical Setting | Main Findings | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Preterm birth |
Cord blood IL-6 concentrations > 11 pg/mL associated with increased rate of severe neonatal morbidity | [ | |
| Preterm birth |
IL-6, TNF-α, IL-1β | [ | ||
| Preterm birth |
A cord blood IL-6 ≥17.5 pg/mL has a sensitivity of 70% and a specificity of 78% in the identification of funisitis | [ | ||
| Inflammation |
Fetal plasma IL-6 transiently increased from 5 h until 24 h after intra-amniotic LPS exposure. Fetal plasma IL-8 increased at four- and eight-days post-intra-amniotic LPS | [ | ||
|
| Infection (Ureaplasma parvum) |
Changes in the VOC profile of ewes are detectable with good accuracy > 72 h post-infection VOC profile changed as the duration of infection progresses | [ | |
|
| Very preterm |
Identification of infants with abnormal motor outcome based on the FA data from early MRI with mean sensitivity 70%, mean specificity 74%, mean AUC 72%, mean F1 score of 68% and mean accuracy 73%. Identification patches around the motor cortex and somatosensory regions with high precision (74%). Part of the cerebellum, and occipital and frontal lobes were also highly associated with abnormal NSMDA/motor outcome. | [ | |
|
| Extreme preterm/very preterm |
No significant difference between conventional EEG amplitude and intensity for infants with or without evidence of white matter injury Premature infants with increasingly severe white matter injury had progressively lower SEFs vs. infants who did not exhibit white matter injury | [ | |
| Extreme preterm/very preterm |
Poor outcome was associated with depressed aEEG/EEG already during the first 12 h and with prolonged interburst intervals and higher interburst percentage at 24 h Long-term outcome can be predicted by aEEG/EEG with 75–80% accuracy already at 24 postnatal hours in very preterm infants, also in infants with no early indication of brain injury | [ | ||
| Very preterm/moderate preterm |
Absent cyclicity on aEEG within 24 h of age is associated with poor outcome in preterm infants | [ | ||
| Very preterm |
Data-driven approach to quantify EEG maturational deviations in preterms with normal and abnormal neurodevelopmental outcomes. Abnormal outcome trajectories were associated with clinically defined dysmature and disorganized EEG patterns. | [ |
Abbreviations: aEEG: amplitude-integrated electroencephalography, AUC: area under the curve, CUS: cerebral ultrasound, EEG: electroencephalography, GA: gestational age, h: hour(s), IL: interleukin, MRI: Magnetic resonance imaging, NSMDA: neurosensory motor developmental assessment, PPROM: preterm premature rupture of the membranes, SEF: spectral edge frequency, TNF: tumor necrosis factor, VOC: volatile organic compounds.