“The lipid ‘signature’ we described could significantly improve the ability to identify patients needing preventative treatment, like aspirin, or more careful monitoring for early signs of disease so that treatment could be initiated in a timely fashion.”
Understanding preeclampsia
Preeclampsia affects up to 7% of all pregnancies. Symptoms typically appear after 20 weeks and include high blood pressure, kidney problems and abnormalities in blood clotting. The condition is associated with dangerous complications such as kidney and liver dysfunction and seizures, as well as a lifelong increased risk of heart disease for the mothers. An estimated 70,000 women around the world die from preeclampsia and its complications each year.
Doctors commonly recommend low-dose aspirin for at-risk women, but it works for only about half of patients, and it needs to be started within the first 16 weeks of pregnancy—well before symptoms appear. That makes it all the more important to identify women at risk early on, and to better understand preeclampsia in general.
Chalfant and his team wanted to find “biomarkers”—biological indicators—in the blood of pregnant women that could reveal their risk of developing preeclampsia. They examined blood plasma samples collected from 57 women in their first 24 weeks of pregnancy, then looked at whether the women went on to develop preeclampsia. The researchers found significant differences in “bioactive lipids” in the blood of women who developed preeclampsia and those who did not.
This, the researchers say, should allow doctors to stratify women‘s risk of developing preeclampsia by measuring lipid changes in their blood. The changes represent an important “lipid fingerprint,” the scientists say, that could be a useful tool for identifying, preventing and better treating preeclampsia.
“The application of our comprehensive lipid profiling method to routine obstetrical care could significantly reduce maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality,” Chalfant said. “It represents an example of how personalized medicine could address a significant public health challenge.”
The findings are published in the Journal of Lipid Research.
More information:
Daniel J. Stephenson et al, Bioactive lipid mediators in plasma are predictors of preeclampsia irrespective of aspirin therapy, Journal of Lipid Research (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.jlr.2023.100377
Citation:
Lipid test can reveal risk of preeclampsia, a potentially deadly pregnancy complication (2023, July 14)
retrieved 16 July 2023
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