Ferranti Erin P, Frediani Jennifer K, Mitchell Rebecca, Fernandes Jolyn, Li Shuzhao, Jones Dean P, Corwin Elizabeth, Dunlop Anne L
Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Emory University, 1520 Clifton Road, Rm 436, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Department of Computer Science, Emory University, 1520 Clifton Road, Rm 436, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
J Pregnancy. 2020 Feb 19;2020:1515321. doi: 10.1155/2020/1515321. eCollection 2020.
Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP) are the most common cardiometabolic complications of pregnancy, affecting nearly 10% of US pregnancies and contributing substantially to maternal and infant morbidity and mortality. In the US, women of African American race are at increased risk for HDP. Early biomarkers that reliably identify women at risk for HDP remain elusive, yet are essential for the early identification and targeting of interventions to improve maternal and infant outcomes. We employed high-resolution metabolomics (HRM) to identify metabolites and metabolic pathways that were altered in early (8-14 weeks) gestation serum samples of pregnant African American women who developed HDP after 20 weeks' gestation ( = 20)-either preeclampsia (PE; = 11) or gestational hypertension (gHTN; = 9)-compared to those who delivered full term without complications ( = 80). We found four metabolic pathways that were significantly ( < 0.05) altered in women who developed PE and five pathways that were significantly ( < 0.05) altered in women who developed gHTN compared to women who delivered full term without complications. We also found that four specific metabolites ( < 0.05) were distinctly upregulated (retinoate, kynurenine) or downregulated (-glycero-3-phosphocholine, 2'4'-dihydroxyacetophenone) in women who developed PE compared to gHTN. These findings support that there are systemic metabolic disruptions that are detectable in early pregnancy (8-14 weeks of gestation) among pregnant African American women who develop PE and gHTN. Furthermore, the early pregnancy metabolic disruptions associated with PE and gHTN are distinct, implying they are unique entities rather than conditions along a spectrum of the same disease process despite the common clinical feature of high blood pressure.
妊娠期高血压疾病(HDP)是妊娠最常见的心脏代谢并发症,影响近10%的美国孕妇,并在很大程度上导致母婴发病和死亡。在美国,非裔美国女性患HDP的风险更高。能够可靠识别HDP风险女性的早期生物标志物仍然难以捉摸,但对于早期识别和针对性干预以改善母婴结局至关重要。我们采用高分辨率代谢组学(HRM)来识别在妊娠20周后(≥20周)发生HDP的非裔美国孕妇早期(8 - 14周)妊娠血清样本中发生改变的代谢物和代谢途径,这些孕妇发生的HDP为子痫前期(PE;n = 11)或妊娠高血压(gHTN;n = 9),并与足月无并发症分娩的女性(n = 80)进行比较。我们发现与足月无并发症分娩的女性相比,发生PE的女性有四条代谢途径显著(P < 0.05)改变,发生gHTN的女性有五条代谢途径显著(P < 0.05)改变。我们还发现,与发生gHTN的女性相比,发生PE的女性有四种特定代谢物(P < 0.05)明显上调(视黄酸、犬尿氨酸)或下调(甘油 - 3 - 磷酸胆碱、2'4'-二羟基苯乙酮)。这些发现支持在发生PE和gHTN的非裔美国孕妇的妊娠早期(妊娠8 - 14周)可检测到全身代谢紊乱。此外,与PE和gHTN相关的妊娠早期代谢紊乱是不同的,这意味着它们是独特的实体,而不是同一疾病过程连续体上的情况,尽管它们有高血压这一共同临床特征。