| Literature DB >> 35208649 |
Aida Petca1,2, Bianca Corina Miron1,2, Irina Pacu1,3, Mihai Cristian Dumitrașcu1,4, Claudia Mehedințu1,5, Florica Șandru1,6, Răzvan-Cosmin Petca1,7, Ioana Cristina Rotar8,9.
Abstract
HELLP syndrome, also known as the syndrome of hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets, represents a severe pregnancy complication typically associated with hypertension. It is associated with increased risks of adverse complications for both mother and fetus. HELLP occurs in 0.2-0.8% of pregnancies, and, in 70-80% of cases, it coexists with preeclampsia (PE). Both of these conditions show a familial tendency. A woman with a history of HELLP pregnancy is at high risk for developing this entity in subsequent pregnancies. We cannot nominate a single worldwide genetic cause for the increased risk of HELLP. Combinations of multiple gene variants, each with a moderate risk, with concurrent maternal and environmental factors are thought to be the etiological mechanisms. This review highlights the significant role of understanding the underlying pathophysiological mechanism of HELLP syndrome. A better knowledge of the disease's course supports early detection, an accurate diagnosis, and proper management of this life-threatening condition.Entities:
Keywords: DIC; HELLP; genetic; microangiopathy; pathogenesis; placenta
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35208649 PMCID: PMC8875732 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58020326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Figure 1Placenta-derived factors involved in HELLP pathology.
Placental factors involved in pathogenesis of liver in HELLP women.
| Factors | HELLP | Role | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Factors influencing the vasculature | |||
| VEGF | ↑ | Proangiogenic, prevents hypertension | Abildgaard et al. [ |
| sFlt1 | ↑↑ | Antiangiogenic, ⊖ vasodilation, ⊕ ET-1 | Abildgaard et al. [ |
| sEng | ↑↑ | ⊖ TGFβ signaling, ⊖ vasodilation, antiangiogenic, influences vascular permeability | Abildgaard et al. [ |
| Gal-1 | ↑ | Proangiogenic, matrix remodeling, procoagulant | Freitag et al. [ |
| ET-1 | ↑↑ | Promotes hypertension, increases hemolysis, liver enzymes, CD4+ and CD8+, decreases platelets | Morris et al. [ |
| Angs-2 | ↑↑ | Activates endothelial cells | Karakus et al. [ |
| ADMA | ↑ | ⊖ NO synthase | Siroen et al. [ |
| Growth factors | |||
| Inhibin A | ↑ | Antagonise activin A | Mylonas et al. [ |
| Activin A | 0 | ⊖ Mitogen-induced DNA synthesis, ⊕ apoptosis in hepatocytes, ↑ tubulogenesis of LSECs induced by VEGF, ↑ survival of LSECs | Mylonas et al. [ |
| Inhibin B | 0 | ↓ FSH release | Mylonas et al. [ |
| Activin B | ↑ | ↑ FSH release, promotes labor | Mylonas et al. [ |
| Apoptosis/necrosis-related factors | |||
| FasL/Fas | ↑↑ | ⊕ Apoptosis | Abildgaard et al. [ |
| Hsp70 | ↑↑ | Marker of tissue damage, ⊕ proinflammatory immune response, ⊕ endothelial injury | Molvarec et al. [ |
| PP 13 | ↑ | Development of fetal/maternal interface, immune regulation | Than et al. [ |
VEGF—vascular endothelial growth factor; sFlt1—soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1; sEng—soluble endoglin; Gal-1—galectin-1; ET-1—endothelin-1; Angs-2—angiotensin-2; ADMA—asymmetric dimethylarginine; ↑—higher than pregnant controls; ↑↑—higher than ↑; 0—no significant difference compared with controls; ⊕—stimulates; ⊖—inhibits; ↓—decreases.
Genetic variants associated with an elevated risk of developing HELLP syndrome.
| Gene Variant | HELLP Compared to | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glucocorticoid receptor gene (GCCR) | Healthy pregnant | Abnormal immune and glucocorticoid | Abildgaard et al. [ |
| Bell SNP polymorphisms | Severe PE | sensitivity | |
| Toll-like receptor 4 gene (TLR4) | Healthy pregnant | Inflammation | Van Rijn et al. [ |
| D299G | PE | Ineffective immunity | |
| T3991 | |||
| Polymorphisms | |||
| VEGF gene (VEGFA) | Healthy pregnant | Angiogenesis, vasculogenesis | Nagy et al. [ |
| C−460T | Healthy pregnant | arterial muscular relaxation | |
| G+405C | |||
| Polymorphisms | |||
| Fas (TNFRSF6) gene, homozygous | Healthy pregnant | Immune regulation, apoptosis | Sziller et al. [ |
| Polymorphism in A−670G | Liver disease | ||
| FV Leiden | Healthy pregnant | Thrombophilia | Muetze et al. [ |