Novel biomarkers in preeclampsia

Preeclampsia is a pregnancy-associated disease with maternal symptoms, but placental origin. Although clinical symptoms are late, systemic and maternal, the origin of preeclampsia is early, local and placental. Despite that various protein biomarkers display changed levels in maternal serum at presy...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inClinica chimica acta Vol. 364; no. 1; pp. 22 - 32
Main Authors Smets, Eva M.L., Visser, Allerdien, Go, Attie T.J.I., van Vugt, John M.G., Oudejans, Cees B.M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.02.2006
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Preeclampsia is a pregnancy-associated disease with maternal symptoms, but placental origin. Although clinical symptoms are late, systemic and maternal, the origin of preeclampsia is early, local and placental. Despite that various protein biomarkers display changed levels in maternal serum at presymptomatic stages, they lack discriminative and predictive power in individual patients. In contrast to protein markers, placental RNA analyzed in maternal plasma permits rapid screening of novel biomarkers including markers not accessible by antibody based assays. This includes transcription factors, non-coding RNA, epigenetic features, as well as genes functionally or genetically linked with preeclampsia. By reviewing genes with placental expression in the Human SymAtlas and comparison with proven qualifiers, a large set of RNA biomarkers was targeted for use in maternal plasma. These biomarkers qualify as novel RNA biomarkers for the presymptomatic detection in first trimester of pregnancy-associated diseases with placental origin and/or dysfunction such as pregnancy-induced hypertension without or with proteinuria (preeclampsia), the HELLP syndrome, and intrauterine growth restriction.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-3
content type line 23
ObjectType-Review-1
ISSN:0009-8981
1873-3492
DOI:10.1016/j.cca.2005.06.011