Literature DB >> 9591485

Lack of association between antiphospholipid antibodies and first-trimester spontaneous abortion: prospective study of pregnancies detected within 21 days of conception.

J L Simpson1, S A Carson, C Chesney, M R Conley, B Metzger, J Aarons, L B Holmes, L Jovanovic-Peterson, R Knopp, J L Mills.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the role of antiphospholipid antibodies and anticardiolipin antibodies in first-trimester losses, addressing experimental pitfalls that preclude excluding the possibility that these antibodies reflect merely the selection bias of studying couples only after they have already experienced losses.
DESIGN: Given that retrospective studies cannot exclude the possibility that such antibodies arise as a result of the fetal death, blood samples were obtained either before pregnancy or very early in pregnancy. Sera were obtained within 21 days of conception.
SETTING: Multicenter university-based hospitals (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development collaborative study). PATIENT(S): Subjects for the current study were 93 women who later experienced pregnancy loss (48 diabetic; 45 nondiabetic), matched 2:1 with 190 controls (93 diabetic and 97 nondiabetic) who subsequently had normal live-born offspring. INTERVENTION(S): Sera from these 283 women were analyzed for antiphospholipid antibodies by enzyme immunoassay. In 260 of the 283 women (87 with pregnancy losses; 173 with live-born infants), sera were also available to perform assays for anticardiolipin antibodies by enzyme immunoassay. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Pregnancy losses. RESULT(S): No association was observed between pregnancy loss and the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies or anticardiolipin antibodies. Levels of antiphospholipid antibodies were 6-19 PL/mL in 62.4% of the pregnancies that ended in losses and > or = 20 PL/mL in 5.4%; among pregnancies resulting in live-born infants, the percentages were 56.8% and 6.8%, respectively. Of the pregnancies that ended in a loss, 5.7% had anticardiolipin antibodies > or = 16 GPL/mL, compared with 5.2% of those ending in a live birth. CONCLUSION(S): This prospective study suggests that anticardiolipin antibodies and antiphospholipid antibodies are not associated with an increased risk for first-trimester pregnancy loss.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9591485     DOI: 10.1016/s0015-0282(98)00054-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Fertil Steril        ISSN: 0015-0282            Impact factor:   7.329


  2 in total

1.  Prevalence of anticardiolipin antibodies in pregnancies with history of repeated miscarriages.

Authors:  Ligia Cosentino Junqueira Franco Spegiorin; Eloísa A Galão; Lúcia Buchalla Bagarelli; Antonio Hélio Oliani; José Maria Pereira de Godoy
Journal:  Open Rheumatol J       Date:  2010-08-26

2.  Clinical significance of nonspecificity of antiphospholipid antibodies in recurrent abortions and unexplained infertility.

Authors:  Priyanka Malik; Maninder Kaur; Gurdeep Kaur Bedi; Khushpreet Kaur
Journal:  Int J Appl Basic Med Res       Date:  2016 Apr-Jun
  2 in total

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