Peterson SE, Nelson JL, Guthrie KA, Gadi VK, Aydelotte TM, Oyer DJ, Prager SW, Gammill HS. Prospective assessment of fetal-maternal cell transfer in miscarriage and pregnancy termination.
Hum Reprod 2012;
27:2607-12. [PMID:
22752611 DOI:
10.1093/humrep/des244]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [What about the content of this article? (0)] [Affiliation(s)] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/01/2023] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Fetal cells (microchimerism) are acquired by women during pregnancy. Fetal microchimerism persists decades later and includes cells with pluripotent capacity. Persistent microchimerism has the capacity for both beneficial and detrimental maternal health consequences. Both miscarriage and termination of pregnancy can result in fetal microchimerism. We sought to determine whether cellular fetal microchimerism is acquired during management of pregnancy loss and further explored factors that could influence fetal cell transfer, including viability of fetal tissue, surgical versus medical management and gestational age.
METHODS
Pregnant women (n= 150 samples from 75 women) with singleton pregnancies undergoing a TOP (n= 63) or treatment for embryonic or fetal demise (miscarriage, n= 12) were enrolled. Mononuclear cells were isolated from blood samples drawn before, and 30 min after, treatment. Fetal cellular microchimerism concentrations were determined using quantitative PCR for a Y chromosome-specific sequence, expressed as genome equivalents of fetal DNA per 100 000 maternal cell equivalents (gEq/10(5)). Detection rate ratios were determined according to clinical characteristics.
RESULTS
Cellular fetal microchimerism was found more often in post- compared with pretreatment samples, 24 versus 5% (P= 0.004) and at higher concentrations, 0-36 versus 0-0.7 gEq/10(5) (P< 0.001). Likelihood of microchimerism was higher in surgical than medical management, detection rate ratio 24.7 (P= 0.02). The detection rate ratio for TOP versus miscarriage was 16.7 for known male fetuses (P= 0.02). Microchimerism did not vary with gestational age.
CONCLUSIONS
Significant fetal cell transfer occurs during miscarriage and TOP. Exploratory analyses support relationships between obstetric clinical factors and acquisition of fetal cellular microchimerism; however, our limited sample size precludes definitive analysis of these relationships, and confirmation is needed. In addition, the long-term persistence and potential consequences of fetal microchimerism on maternal health merit further investigation.
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