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Sökning: WFRF:(Vinnars Marie Therese) > (2010-2014)

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1.
  • Vinnars, Marie-Therese, et al. (författare)
  • Association between placental pathology and neonatal outcome in preeclampsia: a large cohort study
  • 2014
  • Ingår i: Hypertension in Pregnancy. - : Informa Healthcare. - 1064-1955 .- 1525-6065. ; 33:2, s. 145-158
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Objective: To study associations between placental histopathology and neonatal outcome in preeclampsia (PE).Study design: The cohort consisted of 544 singleton pregnancies complicated by PE and managed at Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden during 2000–2009. Evaluation of placental histopathology was made by one senior perinatal pathologist, blinded to outcome. Clinical outcome was obtained from prospectively collected medical registry data and medical records. Main outcome measures were intrauterine fetal death, smallness for gestational age, admission to neonatal unit, major neonatal morbidity (defined as presence of intraventricular hemorrhage ≥grade 3, retinopathy of prematurity ≥grade 3, necrotizing enterocolitis, cystic periventricular leucomalacia and/or severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia) and neonatal mortality. Logistic regression analyses including gestational age were performed.Results: Abnormal placental weight, both low (adjusted odds ratio (OR) [95% confidence interval] 5.2 [1.1–24], p = 0.03) and high (adjusted OR 1048 [21–51 663], p < 0.001) for gestational age, was associated with major neonatal morbidity in preterm infants. Accelerated villous maturation was less prevalent in intrauterine fetal death pregnancies (adjusted OR 0.18 [0.04–0.77], p = 0.02). Decidual arteriopathy increased the odds for admission to neonatal care (adjusted OR 2.7 [1.1–6.5], p = 0.03). Infarction involving ≥5% of the placenta was associated with intrauterine fetal death and small for gestational age infants (adjusted OR’s 75 [5.5–1011], p = 0.001 and 3.2 [1.7–5.9], p < 0.001; respectively). No relations between histological variables and neonatal mortality could be found. Conclusion: Placental pathology in PE reflects adverse perinatal events and deviant placental weight predicts adverse neonatal outcome in preeclamptic women delivering preterm. Placental investigation without delay can contribute to neonatal risk assessment.
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2.
  • Vinnars, Marie-Therese N., et al. (författare)
  • The Number of CD68+ (Hofbauer) Cells is Decreased in Placentas with Chorioamnionitis and with Advancing Gestational Age
  • 2010
  • Ingår i: Pediatric and Developmental Pathology. - : Sage Publications. - 1093-5266 .- 1615-5742. ; 13:4, s. 300-304
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Hofbauer cells are placental macrophages found in chorionic villous stroma; they express classic monocyte/macrophage markers, such as CD68. Little is known about their participation in placental disease and immunologic interactions at the placental interface. The aim of this study was to quantify the amount of Hofbauer cells in placentas complicated, or not, by chorioamnionitis and in placentas from different gestational ages. Fifty-eight 2nd-and 3rd-trimester placentas with the histologic diagnosis of acute chorioamnionitis were compared with 42 control placentas matched according to gestational age. Immunohistochemistry evaluation was performed with a monoclonal anti-CD68 antibody. Five areas of each placenta were photographed and 5 investigators, with the help of a computerized image analysis program, independently evaluated the number of CD68+ cells. Our results showed that there are significantly fewer CD68+ cells per villous area in placentas diagnosed with chorioamnionitis than in those of controls (P < 0.001). Moreover, there was a significant overall decrease in the number of these cells in 3rd as compared with 2nd trimester placentas (P = 0.02), as well as in placentas from term as compared to preterm pregnancies (P = 0.004). Our data indicate that CD68+ Hofbauer cells may be involved in placental infection and possibly associated with the developmental maturation of the fetoplacental unit.
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3.
  • Vinnars, Marie-Therese (författare)
  • Placental histopathology in preeclampsia and outcome of the offspring
  • 2013
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Preeclampsia (PE) is a major cause of maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality. The maternal symptoms are diverse and the neonates are often born premature and growth-restricted. Today the survival of premature infants has increased, but the neonatal complications including morbidity and long-term developmental deficits are still common. The etiology and pathophysiological mechanisms in PE are still not known, but it seems as if a central part of the pathogenesis is associated with an unsuccessful implantation of the placenta into the uterus. The only cure is to deliver the mother, which is often a difficult decision in regard to prematurity of the fetus, when the disease has begun early in pregnancy. In our first and second studies, we examined the placental pathology in relation to the maternal symptoms and severity of disease. The first study showed that there was a correlation between the severity of symptoms and the placental pathology. Further, the pathological picture was similar in mild and severe PE, but differed in relation to controls. To summarize, mild PE seems to be part of the PE spectrum, and not a normal physiological development of pregnancy, in contrast to what has previously been claimed. The second study showed that placental pathology differed in severe PE with and without HELLP syndrome (hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes and low platelets), which is a disease regarded as a PE subtype, although the clinical picture is different from classical PE. This indicates that other mechanisms might be involved in the HELLP syndrome. In the third and fourth studies, we examined the placental pathology in relation to perinatal, neonatal and childhood outcome. In the third study, we investigated the relation between placental pathology and perinatal and neonatal outcome in a cohort of PE patients and found that placental pathology was associated with adverse outcome. In the fourth study, in which we studied infants born extremely premature, we also found correlations between placental pathology and perinatal and neonatal outcome. In the fourth study, we also explored possible relations between placental pathology and neurologic and developmental outcome of the child at the age of 2.5 years. We found a significant association between placental infarction and cerebral palsy (CP), and tendencies between several pathological findings and developmental outcome. Overall, we have shown that the underlying pathologies in mild and severe PE probably are similar, whereas HELLP syndrome might have a different etiology. In addition, we have found associations between placental pathology and outcome of the offspring.
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4.
  • Vinnars, Marie-Therese, et al. (författare)
  • The severity of clinical manifestations in preeclampsia correlates with the amount of placental infarction
  • 2010
  • Ingår i: Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica. - : Nordic Federation of Societies of Obstetrics and Gynecology. - 0001-6349 .- 1600-0412. ; 90:1, s. 19-25
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Objective: To correlate placental histopathology, in particular ischemic changes, with the clinical severity of preeclampsia.Design: A blinded retrospective study.Setting: One Swedish hospital.Sample: One hundred and fifty-seven women with severe (n= 116) or mild (n= 41) preeclampsia and 157 normotensive women matched according to gestational-age.Methods: One senior pathologist, blinded to clinical data and group, examined all histological slides. In the statistical analyses, adjustment for gestational week was done when appropriate.Main outcome measures: Placental histopathological findings. Results: Amount of infarction increased with the severity of preeclampsia (p < 0.001). Infarction involving ≥5% of the placental tissue was seen in 39.7% of severe preeclampsia, 17.1% of mild preeclampsia and 5.1% of non-preeclampsia. When comparing placentas in severe preeclampsia, mild preeclampsia and non-preeclampsia, there was an increase in the presence of any infarction (80.2%, 61.0%, vs. 20.4%). Also, there was a difference in the presence of decidual arteriopathy (35.3%, 22.0%, vs. 3.8%) and accelerated villous maturation (71.6%, 53.3%, vs. 12.6%). We found no difference in intervillous thrombosis, abruption placenta or placental weight in relation to gestational week.Conclusions: In pregnancies with mild or severe preeclampsia, a large proportion of the placentas had histological signs of pathology, in particular signs of ischemia. The pathology was similar, but more pronounced in severe compared to mild preeclampsia, suggesting mild and severe preeclampsia to have similar underlying etiology.
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