Zhao Heather J, Chen Yingan, Liu Tiange, McArthur Kristen, Mueller Noel T
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, United States.
Temerty School of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S1A8, Canada.
Nutr Rev. 2025 Feb 1;83(2):e683-e693. doi: 10.1093/nutrit/nuae057.
Preeclampsia (PE) is a pregnancy-associated hypertension disorder with high morbidity and mortality. Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs)-molecules produced by gut microbes-have been associated with hypertension, yet their relation to PE remains uncertain.
The aim was to review existing human studies that examined associations of the major SCFAs (acetate, propionate, butyrate) in pregnancy with PE development.
Two reviewers independently searched online databases (EMBASE, PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews) in January 2024 using the following terms: "short-chain fatty acids," "acetic acid," "butyric acid," "propionic acid," and "preeclampsia." The final set of included studies had to report associations of SCFAs with PE, be peer-reviewed, be written in English, and be conducted in humans.
The abstracts of 907 studies were screened; 43 underwent full-text screening and 11 (1318 total participants, 352 with PE) were included in the final review. All studies used a case-control design. SCFAs were measured in a range of biospecimens (eg, serum, plasma, feces, placentas, and amniotic fluid) that were collected at distinct time points in pregnancy. All 7 studies that investigated butyrate found that it was lower in PE cases than in controls, with 6 of these showing statistical significance (P < .05). Five studies showed that acetate was significantly lower in individuals with PE compared with healthy individuals, while 1 study found that acetate was significantly higher in PE cases. One study reported significantly higher propionate among PE cases vs controls, while 2 studies reported significantly lower propionate levels in PE cases. The nuance in results for acetate and propionate may owe to reasons such as differences in distributions of population characteristics associated with SCFA level and PE or type of PE (early vs late).
Current epidemiologic evidence, which derives only from case-control studies, suggests that SCFAs, particularly butyrate (protective), in pregnancy are related to the development of PE. Large-cohort studies are warranted to investigate the temporality and potential causality of these associations.
子痫前期(PE)是一种与妊娠相关的高血压疾病,发病率和死亡率较高。肠道微生物产生的短链脂肪酸(SCFAs)分子与高血压有关,但其与子痫前期的关系仍不确定。
旨在综述现有的人体研究,这些研究探讨了孕期主要短链脂肪酸(乙酸、丙酸、丁酸)与子痫前期发生的关联。
2024年1月,两名综述员独立检索在线数据库(EMBASE、PubMed、科学网和Cochrane系统评价数据库),使用以下检索词:“短链脂肪酸”、“乙酸”、“丁酸”、“丙酸”和“子痫前期”。纳入的最终研究集必须报告短链脂肪酸与子痫前期的关联,经过同行评审,用英文撰写,并在人体中进行。
筛选了907项研究的摘要;43项进行了全文筛选,11项(共1318名参与者,352名患有子痫前期)纳入最终综述。所有研究均采用病例对照设计。在孕期不同时间点采集的一系列生物样本(如血清、血浆、粪便、胎盘和羊水)中测量了短链脂肪酸。调查丁酸的7项研究均发现,子痫前期病例中的丁酸含量低于对照组,其中6项具有统计学意义(P < 0.05)。5项研究表明,与健康个体相比,子痫前期患者的乙酸含量显著降低,而1项研究发现子痫前期病例中的乙酸含量显著升高。1项研究报告子痫前期病例中的丙酸含量显著高于对照组,而2项研究报告子痫前期病例中的丙酸水平显著降低。乙酸和丙酸结果的细微差异可能归因于与短链脂肪酸水平和子痫前期相关的人群特征分布差异或子痫前期类型(早发型与晚发型)等原因。
目前仅来自病例对照研究的流行病学证据表明,孕期短链脂肪酸,尤其是丁酸(具有保护作用)与子痫前期的发生有关。有必要开展大型队列研究来调查这些关联的时间顺序和潜在因果关系。