63 results on '"Schoenmakers, Sam"'
Search Results
2. Study protocol for two randomised controlled trials evaluating the effects of Cerclage in the reduction of extreme preterm birth and perinatal mortality in twin pregnancies with a short cervix or dilatation:The TWIN Cerclage studies
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Van Gils, Lissa, De Boer, Marjon A., Bosmans, Judith, Duijnhoven, Ruben, Schoenmakers, Sam, Derks, Jan B., Prins, Jelmer R., Al-Nasiry, Salwan, Lutke Holzik, Margo, Lopriore, Enrico, Van Drongelen, Joris, Knol, Marieke H., Van Laar, Judith O.E.H., Jacquemyn, Yves, Van Holsbeke, Caroline, Dehaene, Isabelle, Lewi, Liesbeth, Van Der Merwe, Hannes, Gyselaers, Wilfried, Obermann-Borst, Sylvia A., Holthuis, Mayella, Mol, Ben W., Pajkrt, Eva, Oudijk, Martijn A., Van Gils, Lissa, De Boer, Marjon A., Bosmans, Judith, Duijnhoven, Ruben, Schoenmakers, Sam, Derks, Jan B., Prins, Jelmer R., Al-Nasiry, Salwan, Lutke Holzik, Margo, Lopriore, Enrico, Van Drongelen, Joris, Knol, Marieke H., Van Laar, Judith O.E.H., Jacquemyn, Yves, Van Holsbeke, Caroline, Dehaene, Isabelle, Lewi, Liesbeth, Van Der Merwe, Hannes, Gyselaers, Wilfried, Obermann-Borst, Sylvia A., Holthuis, Mayella, Mol, Ben W., Pajkrt, Eva, and Oudijk, Martijn A.
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Introduction:Twin pregnancies have a high risk of extreme preterm birth (PTB) at less than 28 weeks of gestation, which is associated with increased risk of neonatal morbidity and mortality. Currently there is a lack of effective treatments for women with a twin pregnancy and a short cervix or cervical dilatation. A possible effective surgical method to reduce extreme PTB in twin pregnancies with an asymptomatic short cervix or dilatation at midpregnancy is the placement of a vaginal cerclage. Methods and analysis: We designed two multicentre randomised trials involving eight hospitals in the Netherlands (sites in other countries may be added at a later date). Women older than 16 years with a twin pregnancy at <24 weeks of gestation and an asymptomatic short cervix of ≤25 mm or cervical dilatation will be randomly allocated (1:1) to both trials on vaginal cerclage and standard treatment according to the current Dutch Society of Obstetrics and Gynaecology guideline (no cerclage). Permuted blocks sized 2 and 4 will be used to minimise the risk of disbalance. The primary outcome measure is PTB of <28 weeks. Analyses will be by intention to treat. The first trial is to demonstrate a risk reduction from 25% to 10% in the short cervix group, for which 194 patients need to be recruited. The second trial is to demonstrate a risk reduction from 80% to 35% in the dilatation group and will recruit 44 women. A cost-effectiveness analysis will be performed from a societal perspective. Ethics and dissemination: This study has been approved by the Research Ethics Committees in the Netherlands on 3/30/2023. Participants will be required to sign an informed consent form. The results will be presented at conferences and published in a peer-reviewed journal. Participants will be informed about the results.
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- 2024
3. Diet-Induced Obesity in Mice Affects the Maternal Gut Microbiota and Immune Response in Mid-Pregnancy
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Wekema, Lieske, Schoenmakers, Sam, Schenkelaars, Nicole, Laskewitz, Anne, Huurman, Romy H., Liu, Lei, Walters, Lisa, Harmsen, Hermie J.M., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Faas, Marijke M., Wekema, Lieske, Schoenmakers, Sam, Schenkelaars, Nicole, Laskewitz, Anne, Huurman, Romy H., Liu, Lei, Walters, Lisa, Harmsen, Hermie J.M., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., and Faas, Marijke M.
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Maternal obesity during pregnancy is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. This might be due to undesired obesity-induced changes in the maternal gut microbiota and related changes in the maternal immune adaptations during pregnancy. The current study examines how obesity affects gut microbiota and immunity in pregnant obese and lean mice during mid-pregnancy (gestational day 12 (GD12)). C57BL/6 mice were fed a high-fat diet or low-fat diet from 8 weeks before mating and during pregnancy. At GD12, we analyzed the gut microbiota composition in the feces and immune responses in the intestine (Peyer’s patches, mesenteric lymph nodes) and the peripheral circulation (spleen and peripheral blood). Maternal obesity reduced beneficial bacteria (e.g., Bifidobacterium and Akkermansia) and changed intestinal and peripheral immune responses (e.g., dendritic cells, Th1/Th2/Th17/Treg axis, monocytes). Numerous correlations were found between obesity-associated bacterial genera and intestinal/peripheral immune anomalies. This study shows that maternal obesity impacts the abundance of specific bacterial gut genera as compared to lean mice and deranges maternal intestinal immune responses that subsequently change peripheral maternal immune responses in mid-pregnancy. Our findings underscore the opportunities for early intervention strategies targeting maternal obesity, ideally starting in the periconceptional period, to mitigate these obesity-related pregnancy effects.
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- 2024
4. Stillbirths due to placental COVID infection associated with chronic histiocytic intervillositis do not recur in subsequent pregnancies
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Cornish, Emily F., van der Meeren, Lotte E., van der Hoorn, Marie Louise P., Schoenmakers, Sam, Vivanti, Alexandre J., Benachi, Alexandra, Whitten, Melissa, Hignett, Stephanie, McDonnell, Thomas, Williams, David J., Cornish, Emily F., van der Meeren, Lotte E., van der Hoorn, Marie Louise P., Schoenmakers, Sam, Vivanti, Alexandre J., Benachi, Alexandra, Whitten, Melissa, Hignett, Stephanie, McDonnell, Thomas, and Williams, David J.
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- 2024
5. Clinical Relevance of Vaginal and Endometrial Microbiome Investigation in Women with Repeated Implantation Failure and Recurrent Pregnancy Loss
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Gao, Xushan, Louwers, Yvonne V., Laven, Joop S.E., Schoenmakers, Sam, Gao, Xushan, Louwers, Yvonne V., Laven, Joop S.E., and Schoenmakers, Sam
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Recent studies have investigated if and how the vaginal and endometrial microbiome might affect endometrial receptivity and reproductive health. Although there is no consensus on the existence of a core uterine microbiome yet, evidence shows that the dominance of Lactobacillus spp. in the female reproductive tract is generally associated with eubiosis and improved chances of successful implantation and an ongoing pregnancy. Conversely, vaginal and endometrial dysbiosis can cause local inflammation and an increase of pro-inflammatory cytokines, compromising the integrity and receptivity of the endometrial mucosa and potentially hampering successful embryonic implantation. This review provides a critical appraisal of the influence of the vaginal and endometrial microbiome as parts of the female reproductive tract on fertility outcomes, focusing on repeated implantation failure (RIF) and recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL). It seems that RIF as well as RPL are both associated with an increase in microbiome diversity and a loss of Lactobacillus dominance in the lower female reproductive system.
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- 2024
6. Preconception maternal gastric bypass surgery and the impact on fetal growth parameters
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Snoek, Katinka M., van de Woestijne, Nadia, Ritfeld, Victoria E.E.G., Klaassen, René A., Versendaal, Hans, Galjaard, Sander, Willemsen, Sten P., Laven, Joop S.E., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Schoenmakers, Sam, Snoek, Katinka M., van de Woestijne, Nadia, Ritfeld, Victoria E.E.G., Klaassen, René A., Versendaal, Hans, Galjaard, Sander, Willemsen, Sten P., Laven, Joop S.E., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., and Schoenmakers, Sam
- Abstract
Background: Bariatric surgery is increasingly performed in women of reproductive age. As bariatric surgery will result in postoperative rapid catabolic weight loss which potentially leads to fetal malnutrition and directly related impaired intra-uterine growth, it is advised to postpone pregnancy for at least 12–18 months after surgery. Objectives: To investigate the consequences of preconception gastric bypass surgery (pGB) on fetal growth parameters and maternal pregnancy outcome. Setting: Maasstad Hospital, The Netherlands, general hospital and Erasmus Medical Center, The Netherlands, university hospital. Methods: We included 97 pGB pregnancies (Maasstad hospital) and 440 non-bariatric pregnancies (Rotterdam Periconception cohort, Erasmus Medical Center). Longitudinal second and third trimester fetal growth parameters (head circumference, biparietal diameter, femur length, abdominal circumference, estimated fetal weight) were analyzed using linear mixed models, adjusting for covariates and possible confounders. Fetal growth and birthweight in pGB pregnancies were compared to non-bariatric pregnancies and Dutch reference curves. Maternal pregnancy outcome in the pGB group was compared to non-bariatric pregnancies. Results: All fetal growth parameters of pGB pregnancies were significantly decreased at 20 weeks’ gestation (P < .001) and throughout the remaining part of pregnancy (P < .05) compared with non-bariatric pregnancies (crude and adjusted models). In our cohort, gestational weight gain was not significantly associated with birthweight corrected for gestational age. Birthweight was significantly lower in pGB pregnancies (estimate –241 grams [95% CI, –342.7 to –140.0]) with a 2-fold increased risk of small-for-gestational-age (SGA) (adjusted odds ratio 2.053 [95% CI, 1.058 to 3.872]). Compared to the non-bariatric pregnancies, we found no significant dif
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- 2024
7. Modelling changes in the pharmacokinetics of tacrolimus during pregnancy after kidney transplantation:A retrospective cohort study
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Schagen, Maaike R., Ulu, Asiye Nur, Francke, Marith I., van de Wetering, Jacqueline, van Buren, Marleen C., Schoenmakers, Sam, Matic, Maja, van Schaik, Ron H.N., Hesselink, Dennis A., de Winter, Brenda C.M., Schagen, Maaike R., Ulu, Asiye Nur, Francke, Marith I., van de Wetering, Jacqueline, van Buren, Marleen C., Schoenmakers, Sam, Matic, Maja, van Schaik, Ron H.N., Hesselink, Dennis A., and de Winter, Brenda C.M.
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Aims: Pregnancy after kidney transplantation is realistic but immunosuppressants should be continued to prevent rejection. Tacrolimus is safe during pregnancy and is routinely dosed based on whole-blood predose concentrations. However, maintaining these concentrations is complicated as physiological changes during pregnancy affect tacrolimus pharmacokinetics. The aim of this study was to describe tacrolimus pharmacokinetics throughout pregnancy and explain the changes by investigating covariates in a population pharmacokinetic model. Methods: Data of pregnant women using a twice-daily tacrolimus formulation following kidney transplantation were retrospectively collected from 6 months before conception, throughout gestation and up to 6 months postpartum. Pharmacokinetic analysis was performed using nonlinear mixed effects modelling. Demographic, clinical and genetic parameters were evaluated as covariates. The final model was evaluated using goodness-of-fit plots, visual predictive checks and a bootstrap analysis. Results: A total of 260 whole-blood tacrolimus predose concentrations from 14 pregnant kidney transplant recipients were included. Clearance increased during pregnancy from 34.5 to 41.7 L/h, by 15, 19 and 21% in the first, second and third trimester, respectively, compared to prior to pregnancy. This indicates a required increase in the tacrolimus dose by the same percentage to maintain the prepregnancy concentration. Haematocrit and gestational age were negatively correlated with tacrolimus clearance (P ≤ 0.01), explaining 18% of interindividual and 85% of interoccasion variability in oral clearance.Conclusions: Tacrolimus clearance increases during pregnancy, resulting in decreased exposure to tacrolimus, which is explained by gestational age and haematocrit. To maintain prepregnancy target whole-blood tacrolimus predose concentrations during pregnancy, increasing the dose is
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- 2024
8. Statins Prevent the Deleterious Consequences of Placental Chemerin Upregulation in Preeclampsia
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Tan, Lunbo, Kluivers, Ans C.M., Cruz-López, Edwyn O., Broekhuizen, Michelle, Chen, Zhongli, Neuman, Rugina I., Schoenmakers, Sam, Ruijgrok, Liesbeth, Van De Velde, Daan, De Winter, Brenda C.M., Van Den Bogaerdt, Antoon J., Lu, Xifeng, Danser, A. H.Jan, Verdonk, Koen, Tan, Lunbo, Kluivers, Ans C.M., Cruz-López, Edwyn O., Broekhuizen, Michelle, Chen, Zhongli, Neuman, Rugina I., Schoenmakers, Sam, Ruijgrok, Liesbeth, Van De Velde, Daan, De Winter, Brenda C.M., Van Den Bogaerdt, Antoon J., Lu, Xifeng, Danser, A. H.Jan, and Verdonk, Koen
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BACKGROUND: Chemerin, an inflammatory adipokine, is upregulatefmed in preeclampsia, and its placental overexpression results in preeclampsia-like symptoms in mice. Statins may lower chemerin. METHODS: Chemerin was determined in a prospective cohort study in women suspected of preeclampsia and evaluated as a predictor versus the sFlt-1 (soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase-1)/PlGF (placental growth factor) ratio. Chemerin release was studied in perfused placentas and placental explants with or without the statins pravastatin and fluvastatin. We also addressed statin placental passage and the effects of chemerin in chorionic plate arteries. RESULTS: Serum chemerin was elevated in women with preeclampsia, and its addition to a predictive model yielded significant effects on top of the sFlt-1/PlGF ratio to predict preeclampsia and its fetal complications. Perfused placentas and explants of preeclamptic women released more chemerin and sFlt-1 and less PlGF than those of healthy pregnant women. Statins reversed this. Both statins entered the fetal compartment, and the fetal/maternal concentration ratio of pravastatin was twice that of fluvastatin. Chemerin constricted plate arteries, and this was blocked by a chemerin receptor antagonist and pravastatin. Chemerin did not potentiate endothelin-1 in chorionic plate arteries. In explants, statins upregulated low-density lipoprotein receptor expression, which relies on the same transcription factor as chemerin, and NO release.CONCLUSIONS: Chemerin is a biomarker for preeclampsia, and statins both prevent its placental upregulation and effects, in an NO and low-density lipoprotein receptor-dependent manner. Combined with their capacity to improve the sFlt-1/PlGF ratio, this offers an attractive mechanism by which statins may prevent or treat preeclampsia.
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- 2024
9. The Effect of an eHealth Coaching Program (Smarter Pregnancy) on Attitudes and Practices Toward Periconception Lifestyle Behaviors in Women Attempting Pregnancy: Prospective Study
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Hojeij, Batoul, Schoenmakers, Sam, Willemsen, Sten, van Rossem, Lenie, Dinnyés, András, Rousian, Melek, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine, Hojeij, Batoul, Schoenmakers, Sam, Willemsen, Sten, van Rossem, Lenie, Dinnyés, András, Rousian, Melek, and Steegers-Theunissen, Régine
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Background: Lifestyle behaviors during the periconception period contribute to achievement of a successful pregnancy. Assessment of attitudes and practices toward these modifiable behaviors can aid in identifying gaps in unhealthy lifestyle behaviors with impact on intervention effectiveness. Objective: This study investigates the effectiveness of coaching by the eHealth program Smarter Pregnancy during the periconception period on improvement of attitudes and practices toward fruit and vegetable intake and smoking in women attempting pregnancy through assisted reproductive technology (ART) or natural conception. Methods: Women attempting pregnancy through ART (n=1060) or natural conception (n=631) were selected during the periconception period. The intervention groups, conceived through ART or naturally, received Smarter Pregnancy coaching for 24 weeks, whereas the control group conceived through ART and did not receive coaching. Attitudes and practices at baseline and follow-up periods were obtained from self-administered online questionnaire provided by the program. Attitudes were assessed in women with unhealthy behaviors as their intention to increase their fruit and vegetable intake and to quit smoking using a yes/no question. Outcomes on practices, suggesting effectiveness, included daily fruit (pieces) and vegetable (grams) intake, and if women smoked (yes/no). Changes in attitudes and practices were compared at 12 and 24 weeks with baseline between the ART intervention and ART control groups, and within the intervention groups between ART and natural conception. Changes in practices at 12 and 24 weeks were also compared with baseline between women with negative attitude and positive attitude within the intervention groups: ART and natural conception. Analysis was performed using linear and logistic regression models adjusted for maternal confounders and baseline attitudes and practices. Results: The ART intervention group showed higher vegetable intake a
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- 2023
10. Editorial:Preterm birth and placental pathology
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Schoenmakers, Sam, Aagaard, Kjersti, Borenstein-Levin, Liron, Kawaza, Kondwani, van der Meeren, Lotte Elisabeth, Mol, Ben Willem, Rhoda, Nathasha Raygaan, Shawe, Jill, Allegaert, Karel, Schoenmakers, Sam, Aagaard, Kjersti, Borenstein-Levin, Liron, Kawaza, Kondwani, van der Meeren, Lotte Elisabeth, Mol, Ben Willem, Rhoda, Nathasha Raygaan, Shawe, Jill, and Allegaert, Karel
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- 2023
11. Prototyping of a Digital Life Course Care Platform for Preconception and Pregnancy Care:Pilot Feasibility and Acceptability Study.
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van der Windt, Melissa, van Zundert, Sofie, Schoenmakers, Sam, van Rossem, Lenie, Theunissen, Régine, van der Windt, Melissa, van Zundert, Sofie, Schoenmakers, Sam, van Rossem, Lenie, and Theunissen, Régine
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Background: A healthy lifestyle plays a key role in the prevention of lifestyle-related diseases, including subfertility and pregnancy complications. Although the benefits of a healthy lifestyle are well-known, long-term adherence is limited. Moreover, memory for lifestyle-related information as well as medical information provided by the medical professional is often poor and insufficient. In order to innovate and improve health care for both the patients and health care professionals, we developed a prototype of a digital life course care platform (Smarter Health app), providing personalized lifestyle care trajectories integrated in medical care journeys. Objective: This pilot study aimed to evaluate the feasibility, defined as the actual app use, and the acceptability, which included patient satisfaction and appreciation, of the Smarter Health app. Methods: Between March 17, 2021, and September 30, 2021, pregnant women familiar with the Dutch language seeking tertiary preconception and pregnancy care were offered the app as part of standard medical care at the outpatient clinic Healthy Pregnancy of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the Erasmus University Medical Center. Three months after activation of the app, patients received a digital questionnaire consisting of aspects of feasibility and acceptability. Results: During this pilot study, 440 patients visited the outpatient clinic Healthy Pregnancy. Of the 440 patients, 293 (66.6%) activated the app. Of the 293 patients who activated the app, 125 (42.7%) filled out the questionnaire. Of these 125 patients, 48 (38.4%) used the app. Most app users used it occasionally and logged in 8 times during their medical care trajectory. Overall, app users were satisfied with the app (median 5-point Likert scale=2.4, IQR 2.0-3.3). Conclusions: Our findings showed that the Smarter Health app, which integrates lifestyle care in medical care, is a feasible he
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- 2023
12. Periconceptional biomarkers for maternal obesity:a systematic review
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Hojeij, Batoul, Rousian, Melek, Sinclair, Kevin D., Dinnyes, Andras, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Schoenmakers, Sam, Hojeij, Batoul, Rousian, Melek, Sinclair, Kevin D., Dinnyes, Andras, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., and Schoenmakers, Sam
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Periconceptional maternal obesity is linked to adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes. Identifying periconceptional biomarkers of pathways affected by maternal obesity can unravel pathophysiologic mechanisms and identify individuals at risk of adverse clinical outcomes. The literature was systematically reviewed to identify periconceptional biomarkers of the endocrine, inflammatory and one-carbon metabolic pathways influenced by maternal obesity. A search was conducted in Embase, Ovid Medline All, Web of Science Core Collection and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials databases, complemented by manual search in PubMed until December 31st, 2020. Eligible studies were those that measured biomarker(s) in relation to maternal obesity, overweight/obesity or body mass index (BMI) during the periconceptional period (14 weeks preconception until 14 weeks post conception). The ErasmusAGE score was used to assess the quality of included studies. Fifty-one articles were included that evaluated over 40 biomarkers. Endocrine biomarkers associated with maternal obesity included leptin, insulin, thyroid stimulating hormone, adiponectin, progesterone, free T4 and human chorionic gonadotropin. C-reactive protein was associated with obesity as part of the inflammatory pathway, while the associated one-carbon metabolism biomarkers were folate and vitamin B12. BMI was positively associated with leptin, C-reactive protein and insulin resistance, and negatively associated with Free T4, progesterone and human chorionic gonadotropin. Concerning the remaining studied biomarkers, strong conclusions could not be established due to limited or contradictory data. Future research should focus on determining the predictive value of the optimal set of biomarkers for their use in clinical settings. The most promising biomarkers include leptin, adiponectin, human chorionic gonadotropin, insulin, progesterone and CRP.
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- 2023
13. Placental Tissue Destruction and Insufficiency From COVID-19 Causes Stillbirth and Neonatal Death From Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury : A Study of 68 Cases With SARS-CoV-2 Placentitis From 12 Countries
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Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., Zaigham, Mehreen, Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., and Zaigham, Mehreen
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Context: Perinatal death is an increasingly important problem as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues, but the mechanism of death has been unclear. Objective: To evaluate the role of the placenta in causing stillbirth and neonatal death following maternal infection with COVID-19 and confirmed placental positivity for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Design: Case-based retrospective clinicopathologic analysis by a multinational group of 44 perinatal specialists from 12 countries of placental and autopsy pathology findings from 64 stillborns and 4 neonatal deaths having placentas testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 following delivery to mothers with COVID-19. Results: Of the 3 findings constituting SARS-CoV-2 placentitis, all 68 placentas had increased fibrin deposition and villous trophoblast necrosis and 66 had chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Sixty-three placentas had massive perivillous fibrin deposition. Severe destructive placental disease from SARS-CoV-2 placentitis averaged 77.7% tissue involvement. Other findings included multiple intervillous thrombi (37%; 25 of 68) and chronic villitis (32%; 22 of 68). The majority (19; 63%) of the 30 autopsies revealed no significant fetal abnormalities except for intrauterine hypoxia and asphyxia. Among all 68 cases, SARS-CoV-2 was detected from a body specimen in 16 of 28 cases tested, most frequently from nasopharyngeal swabs. Four autopsied stillborns had SARS-CoV-2 identified in internal organs. Conclusions: The pathology abnormalities composing SARS-CoV-2 placentitis cause widespread and severe placental destruction resulting in placental malperfusion and insufficiency. In these cases, intrauterine and perinatal death likely results directly from placental insufficiency and fetal hypoxic-ischemic injury. There was no evidence that SARS-CoV-2 involvement of the fetus had a role in causing these deaths.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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14. Placental Tissue Destruction and Insufficiency From COVID-19 Causes Stillbirth and Neonatal Death From Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury : A Study of 68 Cases With SARS-CoV-2 Placentitis From 12 Countries
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Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., Zaigham, Mehreen, Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., and Zaigham, Mehreen
- Abstract
Context: Perinatal death is an increasingly important problem as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues, but the mechanism of death has been unclear. Objective: To evaluate the role of the placenta in causing stillbirth and neonatal death following maternal infection with COVID-19 and confirmed placental positivity for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Design: Case-based retrospective clinicopathologic analysis by a multinational group of 44 perinatal specialists from 12 countries of placental and autopsy pathology findings from 64 stillborns and 4 neonatal deaths having placentas testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 following delivery to mothers with COVID-19. Results: Of the 3 findings constituting SARS-CoV-2 placentitis, all 68 placentas had increased fibrin deposition and villous trophoblast necrosis and 66 had chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Sixty-three placentas had massive perivillous fibrin deposition. Severe destructive placental disease from SARS-CoV-2 placentitis averaged 77.7% tissue involvement. Other findings included multiple intervillous thrombi (37%; 25 of 68) and chronic villitis (32%; 22 of 68). The majority (19; 63%) of the 30 autopsies revealed no significant fetal abnormalities except for intrauterine hypoxia and asphyxia. Among all 68 cases, SARS-CoV-2 was detected from a body specimen in 16 of 28 cases tested, most frequently from nasopharyngeal swabs. Four autopsied stillborns had SARS-CoV-2 identified in internal organs. Conclusions: The pathology abnormalities composing SARS-CoV-2 placentitis cause widespread and severe placental destruction resulting in placental malperfusion and insufficiency. In these cases, intrauterine and perinatal death likely results directly from placental insufficiency and fetal hypoxic-ischemic injury. There was no evidence that SARS-CoV-2 involvement of the fetus had a role in causing these deaths.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Placental Tissue Destruction and Insufficiency From COVID-19 Causes Stillbirth and Neonatal Death From Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury : A Study of 68 Cases With SARS-CoV-2 Placentitis From 12 Countries
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Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., Zaigham, Mehreen, Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., and Zaigham, Mehreen
- Abstract
Context: Perinatal death is an increasingly important problem as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues, but the mechanism of death has been unclear. Objective: To evaluate the role of the placenta in causing stillbirth and neonatal death following maternal infection with COVID-19 and confirmed placental positivity for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Design: Case-based retrospective clinicopathologic analysis by a multinational group of 44 perinatal specialists from 12 countries of placental and autopsy pathology findings from 64 stillborns and 4 neonatal deaths having placentas testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 following delivery to mothers with COVID-19. Results: Of the 3 findings constituting SARS-CoV-2 placentitis, all 68 placentas had increased fibrin deposition and villous trophoblast necrosis and 66 had chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Sixty-three placentas had massive perivillous fibrin deposition. Severe destructive placental disease from SARS-CoV-2 placentitis averaged 77.7% tissue involvement. Other findings included multiple intervillous thrombi (37%; 25 of 68) and chronic villitis (32%; 22 of 68). The majority (19; 63%) of the 30 autopsies revealed no significant fetal abnormalities except for intrauterine hypoxia and asphyxia. Among all 68 cases, SARS-CoV-2 was detected from a body specimen in 16 of 28 cases tested, most frequently from nasopharyngeal swabs. Four autopsied stillborns had SARS-CoV-2 identified in internal organs. Conclusions: The pathology abnormalities composing SARS-CoV-2 placentitis cause widespread and severe placental destruction resulting in placental malperfusion and insufficiency. In these cases, intrauterine and perinatal death likely results directly from placental insufficiency and fetal hypoxic-ischemic injury. There was no evidence that SARS-CoV-2 involvement of the fetus had a role in causing these deaths.
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- 2022
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16. Placental Tissue Destruction and Insufficiency From COVID-19 Causes Stillbirth and Neonatal Death From Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury : A Study of 68 Cases With SARS-CoV-2 Placentitis From 12 Countries
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Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., Zaigham, Mehreen, Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., and Zaigham, Mehreen
- Abstract
Context: Perinatal death is an increasingly important problem as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues, but the mechanism of death has been unclear. Objective: To evaluate the role of the placenta in causing stillbirth and neonatal death following maternal infection with COVID-19 and confirmed placental positivity for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Design: Case-based retrospective clinicopathologic analysis by a multinational group of 44 perinatal specialists from 12 countries of placental and autopsy pathology findings from 64 stillborns and 4 neonatal deaths having placentas testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 following delivery to mothers with COVID-19. Results: Of the 3 findings constituting SARS-CoV-2 placentitis, all 68 placentas had increased fibrin deposition and villous trophoblast necrosis and 66 had chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Sixty-three placentas had massive perivillous fibrin deposition. Severe destructive placental disease from SARS-CoV-2 placentitis averaged 77.7% tissue involvement. Other findings included multiple intervillous thrombi (37%; 25 of 68) and chronic villitis (32%; 22 of 68). The majority (19; 63%) of the 30 autopsies revealed no significant fetal abnormalities except for intrauterine hypoxia and asphyxia. Among all 68 cases, SARS-CoV-2 was detected from a body specimen in 16 of 28 cases tested, most frequently from nasopharyngeal swabs. Four autopsied stillborns had SARS-CoV-2 identified in internal organs. Conclusions: The pathology abnormalities composing SARS-CoV-2 placentitis cause widespread and severe placental destruction resulting in placental malperfusion and insufficiency. In these cases, intrauterine and perinatal death likely results directly from placental insufficiency and fetal hypoxic-ischemic injury. There was no evidence that SARS-CoV-2 involvement of the fetus had a role in causing these deaths.
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- 2022
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17. Gravid uterine torsion after prone positioning in SARS-CoV2 (COVID-19)-related acute respiratory distress syndrome
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van Uitert, Evelyne, Schoenmakers, Sam, Hendriks, Bavo, Duvekot, J.J., Gommers, Diederik, Cornette, J.M.J., van Uitert, Evelyne, Schoenmakers, Sam, Hendriks, Bavo, Duvekot, J.J., Gommers, Diederik, and Cornette, J.M.J.
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A multiparous pregnant patient was admitted to the intensive care unit in her third trimester of pregnancy for prone positioning mechanical ventilation after developing SARS-CoV2 (COVID-19)-related acute respiratory distress syndrome. Repositioning in left lateral tilt was followed by uterine contractions and cardiotocography alterations. Preterm caesarean section was performed based on persistent foetal tachycardia and suspected foetal distress, followed by a per-operative diagnosis of uterine levotorsion. This case report is the first to explore a potential causal link between prolonged prone positioning in late pregnancy and postural gravid uterine torsion and highlights the need for appropriate foetal monitoring during prone positioning mechanical ventilation support.
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- 2022
18. First Trimester Maternal Homocysteine and Embryonic and Fetal Growth:The Rotterdam Periconception Cohort
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Rubini, Eleonora, Snoek, Katinka M., Schoenmakers, Sam, Willemsen, Sten P., Sinclair, Kevin D., Rousian, Melek, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Rubini, Eleonora, Snoek, Katinka M., Schoenmakers, Sam, Willemsen, Sten P., Sinclair, Kevin D., Rousian, Melek, and Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M.
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Homocysteine is a marker for derangements in one-carbon metabolism. Elevated ho-mocysteine may represent a causal link between poor maternal nutrition and impaired embryonic and fetal development. We sought to investigate associations between reference range maternal homocysteine and embryonic and fetal growth. We enrolled 1060 singleton pregnancies (555 natural and 505 in vitro fertilization/intracytoplasmic sperm injection (IVF/ICSI) pregnancies) from Novem-ber 2010 to December 2020. Embryonic and fetal body and head growth was assessed throughout pregnancy using three-dimensional ultrasound scans and virtual reality techniques. Homocysteine was negatively associated with first trimester embryonic growth in the included population (crown-rump length B −0.023 mm, 95% CI −0.038,−0.007, p = 0.004, embryonic volume B −0.011 cm3, 95% CI −0.018,−0.004, p = 0.003). After stratification for conception mode, this association remained in IVF/ICSI pregnancies with frozen embryo transfer (crown-rump length B −0.051 mm, 95% CI −0.081,−0.023, p < 0.001, embryonic volume B −0.024 cm3, 95% CI −0.039,−0.009, p = 0.001), but not in IVF/ICSI pregnancies with fresh embryo transfer and natural pregnancies. Homocysteine was not associated with longitudinal measurements of head growth in first trimester, nor with second and third trimester fetal growth. Homocysteine in the highest quartile (7.3–14.9 µmol/L) as opposed to the lowest (2.5–5.2 µmol/L) was associated with reduced birth weight in natural pregnancies only (B −51.98 g, 95% CI −88.13,−15.84, p = 0.005). In conclusion, high maternal homocysteine within the reference range is negatively associated with first trimester embryonic growth and birth weight, and the effects of homocysteine are dependent on conception mode.
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- 2022
19. Detection of spontaneous preterm birth by maternal urinary volatile organic compound analysis:A prospective cohort study
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Ronde, Emma, Frerichs, Nina M., Brantenaar, Shauni, El Manouni El Hassani, Sofia, Wicaksono, Alfian N., Covington, James A., De Boer, Nanne K.H., De Meij, Tim G., Hankemeier, Thomas, Reiss, Irwin K.M., Schoenmakers, Sam, Ronde, Emma, Frerichs, Nina M., Brantenaar, Shauni, El Manouni El Hassani, Sofia, Wicaksono, Alfian N., Covington, James A., De Boer, Nanne K.H., De Meij, Tim G., Hankemeier, Thomas, Reiss, Irwin K.M., and Schoenmakers, Sam
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Accurate prediction of preterm birth is currently challenging, resulting in unnecessary maternal hospital admittance and fetal overexposure to antenatal corticosteroids. Novel biomarkers like volatile organic compounds (VOCs) hold potential for predictive, bed-side clinical applicability. In a proof of principle study, we aimed to assess the predictive potential of urinary volatile organic compounds in the identification of pregnant women at risk for preterm birth. Urine samples of women with a high risk for preterm birth (≧24 + 0 until 36 + 6 weeks) were collected prospectively and analyzed for VOCs using gas chromatography coupled with an ion mobility spectrometer (GS-IMS). Urinary VOCs of women delivering preterm were compared with urine samples of women with suspicion of preterm birth collected at the same gestation period but delivering at term. Additionally, the results were also interpreted in combination with patient characteristics, such as physical examination at admission, microbial cultures, and placental pathology. In our cohort, we found that urinary VOCs of women admitted for imminent preterm birth were not significantly different in the overall group of women delivering preterm vs. term. However, urinary VOCs of women admitted for imminent preterm birth and delivering between 28 + 0 until 36 + 6 weeks compared to women with a high risk for preterm birth during the same gestation period and eventually delivering at term (>37 + 0 weeks) differed significantly (area under the curve: 0.70). In addition, based on the same urinary VOCs, we could identify women with a confirmed chorioamnionitis (area under the curve: 0.72) and urinary tract infection (area under the curve: 0.97). In conclusion, urinary VOCs hold potential for non-invasive, bedside prediction of preterm birth and on the spot identification of intra-uterine infection and urinary tract infections. We suggest these observations are further explored in larger populations.
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- 2022
20. Comparative Analysis of In Vitro Models to Study Antibody-Dependent Enhancement of Zika Virus Infection
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Langerak, Thomas, Mumtaz, Noreen, Koopmans, Marion, Schoenmakers, Sam, Rockx, Barry, Langerak, Thomas, Mumtaz, Noreen, Koopmans, Marion, Schoenmakers, Sam, and Rockx, Barry
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During the 2015–2016 outbreak of Zika virus (ZIKV) in the Americas, a previously unknown severe complication of ZIKV infection during pregnancy resulting in birth defects was reported. Since the ZIKV outbreak occurred in regions that were highly endemic for the related dengue virus (DENV), it was speculated that antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) of a ZIKV infection, caused by the presence of cross-reactive DENV antibodies, could contribute to ZIKV disease severity. Emerging evidence indicates that, while in vitro models can show ADE of ZIKV infection, ADE does not seem to contribute to congenital ZIKV disease severity in humans. However, the role of ADE of ZIKV infection during pregnancy and in vertical ZIKV transmission is not well studied. In this study, we hypothesized that pregnancy may affect the ability of myeloid cells to become infected with ZIKV, potentially through ADE. We first systematically assessed which cell lines and primary cells can be used to study ZIKV ADE in vitro, and we compared the difference in outcomes of (ADE) infection experiments between these cells. Subsequently, we tested the hypothesis that pregnancy may affect the ability of myeloid cells to become infected through ADE, by performing ZIKV ADE assays with primary cells isolated from blood of pregnant women from different trimesters and from age-matched non-pregnant women. We found that ADE of ZIKV infection can be induced in myeloid cell lines U937, THP-1, and K562 as well as in monocyte-derived macrophages from healthy donors. There was no difference in permissiveness for ZIKV infection or ADE potential of ZIKV infection in primary cells of pregnant women compared to non-pregnant women. In conclusion, no increased permissiveness for ZIKV infection and ADE of ZIKV infection was found using in vitro models of primary myeloid cells from pregnant women compared to age-matched non-pregnant women.
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- 2022
21. Implementation of effective blended periconception lifestyle care in a tertiary hospital in the Netherlands:A cross-sectional study on determinants and patient satisfaction
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Van Der Windt, Melissa, Schoenmakers, Sam, Van Der Kleij, Rianne M.J.J., Van Rossem, Lenie, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Van Der Windt, Melissa, Schoenmakers, Sam, Van Der Kleij, Rianne M.J.J., Van Rossem, Lenie, and Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M.
- Abstract
Objective To identify implementation determinants of blended periconception lifestyle care, and to evaluate patient satisfaction. Design Cross-sectional study. Setting The outpatient clinic of the department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology of the Erasmus MC. Participants Implementation part: counsellors providing blended periconception lifestyle care. Patient satisfaction part: women who received blended periconception lifestyle care. Methods Blended periconception lifestyle care, including face-to-face counselling and 26 weeks of lifestyle coaching via the online platform 'Smarter Pregnancy', was implemented between June-December 2018. The Measurement Instrument for Determinants of Innovations questionnaire was used as input for the consolidated framework for implementation research to assess determinants of implementation. To evaluate patient satisfaction, patients receiving lifestyle care filled out an evaluation questionnaire, including questions on the needs for lifestyle counselling, information provision during counselling, and motivation and lifestyle change after counselling. Primary and secondary outcome measures Identification of implementation determinants and the level of patient satisfaction. Results Facilitators were reported in the implementation domains 'characteristics of the intervention' and 'characteristics of the individuals'. Barriers were in the implementation domains 'inner setting' and 'implementation process'. Regarding patient satisfaction on nutrition counselling, 31% of the respondents wanted information prior to the counselling session, 22% received new information after consultation, 51% got motivated to change and 40% changed their nutritional behaviour. Conclusions A considerable number of patients improved lifestyle after counselling, although, a relatively small number wanted lifestyle counselling prior to consultation. This study underlines the importance of implementation science and the information it provides for improving th
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- 2022
22. Placental Tissue Destruction and Insufficiency From COVID-19 Causes Stillbirth and Neonatal Death From Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury
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Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmstrom, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Asa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., Zaigham, Mehreen, Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmstrom, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Asa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., and Zaigham, Mehreen
- Abstract
Context.-Perinatal death is an increasingly important problem as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues, but the mechanism of death has been unclear. Objective.-To evaluate the role of the placenta in causing stillbirth and neonatal death following maternal infection with COVID-19 and confirmed placental positivity for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Design.-Case-based retrospective clinicopathologic analysis by a multinational group of 44 perinatal specialists from 12 countries of placental and autopsy pathology findings from 64 stillborns and 4 neonatal deaths having placentas testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 following delivery to mothers with COVID-19. Results.-Of the 3 findings constituting SARS-CoV-2 placentitis, all 68 placentas had increased fibrin deposition and villous trophoblast necrosis and 66 had chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Sixty-three placentas had massive perivillous fibrin deposition. Severe destructive placental disease from SARS-CoV-2 placentitis averaged 77.7% tissue involvement. Other findings included multiple intervillous thrombi (37%; 25 of 68) and chronic villitis (32%; 22 of 68). The majority (19; 63%) of the 30 autopsies revealed no significant fetal abnormalities except for intrauterine hypoxia and asphyxia. Among all 68 cases, SARS-CoV-2 was detected from a body specimen in 16 of 28 cases tested, most frequently from nasopharyngeal swabs. Four autopsied stillborns had SARS-CoV-2 identified in internal organs. Conclusions.-The pathology abnormalities composing SARS-CoV-2 placentitis cause widespread and severe placental destruction resulting in placental malperfusion and insufficiency. In these cases, intrauterine and perinatal death likely results directly from placental insufficiency and fetal hypoxic-ischemic injury. There was no evidence that SARS-CoV-2 involvement of the fetus had a role in causing these deaths., Funding Agencies|Slovak Research and Development Agency grant [PP-COVID-20-051]; Belgian Fund for Scientific Research [40002773]; Fetus for Life charity
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- 2022
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23. Omeprazole Administration in Preterm Preeclampsia:a Randomized Controlled Trial to Study Its Effect on sFlt-1 (Soluble Fms-Like Tyrosine Kinase-1), PlGF (Placental Growth Factor), and ET-1 (Endothelin-1)
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Neuman, Rugina I., Baars, Milan D., Saleh, Langeza, Broekhuizen, Michelle, Nieboer, Daan, Cornette, Jérôme, Schoenmakers, Sam, Verhoeven, Michel, Koch, Birgit C.P., Russcher, Henk, Van Den Berg, Sjoerd A.A., Van Den Meiracker, Anton H., Visser, Willy, Danser, A. H.Jan, Neuman, Rugina I., Baars, Milan D., Saleh, Langeza, Broekhuizen, Michelle, Nieboer, Daan, Cornette, Jérôme, Schoenmakers, Sam, Verhoeven, Michel, Koch, Birgit C.P., Russcher, Henk, Van Den Berg, Sjoerd A.A., Van Den Meiracker, Anton H., Visser, Willy, and Danser, A. H.Jan
- Abstract
Background: Low sFlt-1 (soluble Fms-like tyrosine kinase-1) and ET-1 (endothelin-1) levels have been reported in preeclamptic women using proton pump inhibitors. Methods: Here, we examined whether the proton pump inhibitor omeprazole could acutely reduce sFlt-1 and ET-1 (measured as CT-proET-1 [C-terminal pro-endothelin-1]), or increase free PlGF (placental growth factor) in 20 women with confirmed preeclampsia. Primary outcome was specified as the difference in sFlt-1, PlGF, or CT-proET-1 after 4 days of omeprazole versus 20 preeclamptic women not receiving omeprazole. Results: Mean maternal age was 30 years, and median gestational age was 30+3weeks. Baseline sFlt-1 levels were identical in both groups, and the same was true for PlGF or CT-proET-1. After 4 days, sFlt-1 levels remained similar in women not receiving omeprazole compared with women receiving omeprazole, while the levels of PlGF and CT-proET-1 also did not differ between groups. Women receiving omeprazole had a similar prolongation of pregnancy after inclusion compared with those in the nonomeprazole group (median 15 versus 14 days). Except for a higher neonatal intubation rate in the nonomeprazole group (31% versus 4%, P=0.02), there were no differences in maternal/perinatal complications. Finally, making use of the placenta perfusion model, we established that both omeprazole and its S-isomer, esomeprazole, when maternally applied, reached the fetal compartment (fetal-to-maternal ratio's 0.43-0.59), while only esomeprazole inhibited placental sFlt-1 release. Conclusions: Administration of omeprazole to women with confirmed preeclampsia does not alter their circulating levels of sFlt-1, PlGF, or ET-1, arguing against a role of this drug as a treatment for this syndrome.
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- 2022
24. A high periconceptional maternal ultra-processed food consumption impairs embryonic growth:The Rotterdam periconceptional cohort
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Smit, Ashley J.P., Hojeij, Batoul, Rousian, Melek, Schoenmakers, Sam, Willemsen, Sten P., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., van Rossem, Lenie, Smit, Ashley J.P., Hojeij, Batoul, Rousian, Melek, Schoenmakers, Sam, Willemsen, Sten P., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., and van Rossem, Lenie
- Abstract
Background & aims: Periconceptional maternal dietary patterns contribute to embryonic growth and development. No knowledge is available about the impact of periconceptional maternal ultra-processed food consumption on embryonic growth. Therefore, the aim of the present study is to investigate the impact of periconceptional maternal ultra-processed food consumption on embryonic growth using repeated crown-rump length (CRL) and embryonic volume (EV) measurements. Methods: This study is embedded in the ongoing prospective observational Rotterdam periconceptional cohort (Predict Study). A total of 701 pregnancies, of which 446 were conceived after natural conception and 255 after IVF or ICSI treatment were included. Women were at least 18 years of age and were recruited at the outpatient clinic before 13+0 weeks of gestation. CRL and EV were measured using three-dimensional ultrasound datasets and virtual reality techniques at the 7th, 9th and 11th week of gestation. The food frequency questionnaire of each participant was used to calculate the percentage of maternal energy consumed from ultra-processed foods (PEI-UPF) for each participant. The association between PEI-UPF and the first trimester CRL and EV measurements was studied with linear mixed models and adjusted for potential confounders including maternal factors, gestational age, foetal sex, and total energy intake. Results: PEI-UPF ranged from 16% to 88%. In fully adjusted linear mixed models, a 10% increase in maternal PEI-UPF was significantly associated with smaller growth trajectories of CRL and EV (b −0.041 √mm (95% confidence interval (CI) −0.074 to −0.008), P = 0.02 and b −0.016 ∛cm (95% CI -0.030 to −0.001), P = 0.04, respectively). When additionally adjusted for micronutrient content of diet (vitamins B1, B2, B6, B11 and B12, and zinc), the associations for the CRL and EV measurements lost significance. Conclusion: Periconceptional maternal consumption of ultra-processed foods is asso
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- 2022
25. Maternal obesity during pregnancy leads to derangements in one-carbon metabolism and the gut microbiota:implications for fetal development and offspring wellbeing
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Rubini, Eleonora, Schenkelaars, Nicole, Rousian, Melek, Sinclair, Kevin D., Wekema, Lieske, Faas, Marijke M., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Schoenmakers, Sam, Rubini, Eleonora, Schenkelaars, Nicole, Rousian, Melek, Sinclair, Kevin D., Wekema, Lieske, Faas, Marijke M., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., and Schoenmakers, Sam
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A healthy diet before and during pregnancy is beneficial in acquiring essential B vitamins involved in 1-carbon metabolism, and in maintaining a healthy gut microbiota. Each play important roles in fetal development, immune-system remodeling, and pregnancy-nutrient acquisition. Evidence shows that there is a reciprocal interaction between the one-carbon metabolism and the gut microbiota given that dietary intake of B vitamins has been shown to influence the composition of the gut microbiota, and certain gut bacteria also synthesize B vitamins. This reciprocal interaction contributes to the individual's overall availability of B vitamins and, therefore, should be maintained in a healthy state during pregnancy. There is an emerging consensus that obese pregnant women often have derangements in 1-carbon metabolism and gut dysbiosis owing to high intake of nutritiously poor foods and a chronic systemic inflammatory state. For example, low folate and vitamin B12 in obese women coincide with the decreased presence of B vitamin-producing bacteria and increased presence of inflammatory-associated bacteria from approximately mid-pregnancy. These alterations are risk factors for adverse pregnancy outcomes, impaired fetal development, and disruption of fetal growth and microbiota formation, which may lead to potential long-term offspring metabolic and neurologic disorders. Therefore, preconceptional and pregnant obese women may benefit from dietary and lifestyle counseling to improve their dietary nutrient intake, and from monitoring their B vitamin levels and gut microbiome by blood tests and microbiota stool samples. In addition, there is evidence that some probiotic bacteria have folate biosynthetic capacity and could be used to treat gut dysbiosis. Thus, their use as an intervention strategy for obese women holds potential and should be further investigated. Currently, there are many knowledge gaps concerning the relationship between one-carbon metabolism and
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- 2022
26. Placental Tissue Destruction and Insufficiency From COVID-19 Causes Stillbirth and Neonatal Death From Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury:A Study of 68 Cases With SARS-CoV-2 Placentitis From 12 Countries
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Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Ferreres, Joan Carles, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmstrom, Sandra, Irles, Claudine Liliane, Leijonhfvud, Asa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Otani, Andre Ricardo Oyamada, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., Van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., Zaigham, Mehreen, Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Ferreres, Joan Carles, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmstrom, Sandra, Irles, Claudine Liliane, Leijonhfvud, Asa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Otani, Andre Ricardo Oyamada, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., Van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., and Zaigham, Mehreen
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Context.-Perinatal death is an increasingly important problem as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues, but the mechanism of death has been unclear. Objective.-To evaluate the role of the placenta in causing stillbirth and neonatal death following maternal infection with COVID-19 and confirmed placental positivity for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Design.-Case-based retrospective clinicopathologic analysis by a multinational group of 44 perinatal specialists from 12 countries of placental and autopsy pathology findings from 64 stillborns and 4 neonatal deaths having placentas testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 following delivery to mothers with COVID-19. Results.-Of the 3 findings constituting SARS-CoV-2 placentitis, all 68 placentas had increased fibrin deposition and villous trophoblast necrosis and 66 had chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Sixty-three placentas had massive perivillous fibrin deposition. Severe destructive placental disease from SARS-CoV-2 placentitis averaged 77.7% tissue involvement. Other findings included multiple intervillous thrombi (37%; 25 of 68) and chronic villitis (32%; 22 of 68). The majority (19; 63%) of the 30 autopsies revealed no significant fetal abnormalities except for intrauterine hypoxia and asphyxia. Among all 68 cases, SARS-CoV-2 was detected from a body specimen in 16 of 28 cases tested, most frequently from nasopharyngeal swabs. Four autopsied stillborns had SARS-CoV-2 identified in internal organs. Conclusions.-The pathology abnormalities composing SARS-CoV-2 placentitis cause widespread and severe placental destruction resulting in placental malperfusion and insufficiency. In these cases, intrauterine and perinatal death likely results directly from placental insufficiency and fetal hypoxic-ischemic injury. There was no evidence that SARS-CoV-2 involvement of the fetus had a role in causing these deaths.
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- 2022
27. Microbiome as a predictor of implantation
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Gao, Xu Shan, Laven, Joop, Louwers, Yvonne, Budding, Andries, Schoenmakers, Sam, Gao, Xu Shan, Laven, Joop, Louwers, Yvonne, Budding, Andries, and Schoenmakers, Sam
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Purpose of reviewReview the latest research on the female urogenital microbiome as a predictor of successful implantation.Recent findingsLactobacillus crispatus seems to be beneficial species in a healthy female genital tract, although the presence of anaerobic bacteria and their impact has yet to be determined. The vaginal microbiome is associated with assisted reproductive technology (ART) outcome in terms of successful implantation and pregnancy. Approaches restoring a dysbiotic vaginal microbiome seem promising. It is questionable if a unique endometrial microbiome exists, given the low bacterial biomass, the invasiveness of endometrial sampling, and its associated high contamination risk. Future studies should focus on the whole microbiome using proteomics and metabolomics, as well as the virome to get a more holistic understanding of its role in reproduction.SummaryThe vaginal and endometrial compartments are being studied to determine a healthy and unhealthy microbiome composition. Defining a healthy composition could provide insight into physiological processes related to the success of embryo implantation. The vaginal microbiome is easily accessible and its composition can be reliably assessed and can be associated with ART outcome. The existence of an endometrial or uterine microbiome is still debated, due to the combination of low biomass and unavoidable high risk of contamination during sampling.
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- 2022
28. Pharmacokinetics of the most commonly used antihypertensive drugs throughout pregnancy methyldopa, labetalol, and nifedipine:a systematic review
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van de Vusse, Dylan, Mian, Paola, Schoenmakers, Sam, Flint, Robert B., Visser, Willy, Allegaert, Karel, Versmissen, Jorie, van de Vusse, Dylan, Mian, Paola, Schoenmakers, Sam, Flint, Robert B., Visser, Willy, Allegaert, Karel, and Versmissen, Jorie
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Purpose Antihypertensive drugs are among the most prescribed drugs during pregnancy. Methyldopa, labetalol, and nifedipine have been perceived safe to use during pregnancy and are therefore recommended in international guidelines for treatment of hypertension. In this review, we provide a complete overview of what is known on the pharmacokinetics (PK) of the antihypertensive drugs methyldopa, labetalol, and nifedipine throughout pregnancy. Methods A systematic search was performed to retrieve studies on the PK of methyldopa, labetalol, and nifedipine used throughout pregnancy. The search was restricted to English and original studies. The systematic search was conducted on July 27, 2021, in Embase, Medline Ovid, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, and Google Scholar. Keywords were methyldopa, labetalol, nifedipine, pharmacokinetics, pregnancy, and placenta. Results A total of 1459 unique references were identified of which title and abstract were screened. Based on this screening, 67 full-text papers were assessed, to retain 30 PK studies of which 2 described methyldopa, 12 labetalol, and 16 nifedipine. No fetal accumulation is found for any of the antihypertensive drugs studied. Conclusion We conclude that despite decades of prescribing methyldopa, labetalol, and nifedipine throughout pregnancy, descriptions of their PK during pregnancy are hampered by a large heterogeneity in the low number of available studies. Aiming for evidence-based and personalized dosing of antihypertensive medication in the future, further studies on the relationship of both PK and pharmacodynamics (including the optimal blood pressure targeting) during pregnancy and pregnancy-related pathology are urgently needed to prevent undertreatment, overtreatment, and side effects.
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- 2022
29. A higher preconceptional paternal body mass index influences fertilization rate and preimplantation embryo development
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Hoek, Jeffrey, Schoenmakers, Sam, van Duijn, Linette, Willemsen, Sten P., van Marion, Eva S., Laven, Joop S.E., Baart, Esther B., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Hoek, Jeffrey, Schoenmakers, Sam, van Duijn, Linette, Willemsen, Sten P., van Marion, Eva S., Laven, Joop S.E., Baart, Esther B., and Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M.
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Background: Obesity is a worldwide problem affecting the health of millions of people throughout the life course. Studies reveal that obesity impairs sperm parameters and epigenetics, potentially influencing embryonic development. Objective: To investigate the association between preconceptional paternal body mass index (BMI) and embryo morphokinetics using a time-lapse incubator and in vitro fertilization (IVF) and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) outcomes. Materials and methods: Participants were recruited from a tertiary hospital in this prospective periconceptional cohort study. A total of 211 men were included: 86 with normal weight (BMI < 25.0), 94 overweight (BMI 25–29.9), and 41 obese (BMI ≥ 30). These men were part of a couple that underwent IVF/ICSI treatment with ejaculated sperm after which 757 embryos were cultured in a time-lapse incubator. The main outcome parameters consisted of fertilization rate, embryo developmental morphokinetics, embryo quality assessed by a time-lapse prediction algorithm (KIDScore), and live birth rate. Results: A higher paternal BMI was associated with faster development of the preimplantation embryo, especially during the first cleavage divisions (t2: −0.11 h (p = 0.05) and t3: −0.19 h (p = 0.01)). Embryo quality using the KIDScore was not altered. The linear regression analysis, after adjustment for confounders (paternal age, ethnicity, smoking, alcohol use, education, total motile sperm count, and maternal age and BMI), showed an inverse association between paternal BMI and fertilization rate (effect estimate: −0.01 (p = 0.002)), but not with the live birth rate. Discussion and conclusion: Our data demonstrate that a higher preconceptional paternal BMI is associated with a reduced fertilization rate in IVF/ICSI treatment. Our findings underline the importance of a healthy paternal weight during the preconception period.
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- 2022
30. Pentoxifylline as a therapeutic option for pre-eclampsia:a study on its placental effects
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Broekhuizen, Michelle, de Vries, Rene, Smits, Marja A. W., Dik, Willem A., Schoenmakers, Sam, Koch, Birgit C. P., Merkus, Daphne, Reiss, Irwin K. M., Danser, A. H. Jan, Simons, Sinno H. P., Hitzerd, Emilie, Broekhuizen, Michelle, de Vries, Rene, Smits, Marja A. W., Dik, Willem A., Schoenmakers, Sam, Koch, Birgit C. P., Merkus, Daphne, Reiss, Irwin K. M., Danser, A. H. Jan, Simons, Sinno H. P., and Hitzerd, Emilie
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Background and Purpose Recently pentoxifylline, a non-selective phosphodiesterase inhibitor and adenosine receptor antagonist, has attracted much interest for the treatment of the increased vascular resistance and endothelial dysfunction in pre-eclampsia. We therefore investigated the placental transfer, vascular effects and anti-inflammatory actions of pentoxifylline in healthy and pre-eclamptic human placentas. Experimental Approach The placental transfer and metabolism of pentoxifylline were studied using ex vivo placenta perfusion experiments. In wire myography experiments with chorionic plate arteries, pentoxifyllines vasodilator properties were investigated, focusing on the cGMP and cAMP pathways and adenosine receptors. Its effects on inflammatory factors were also studied in placental explants. Key Results Pentoxifylline transferred from the maternal to foetal circulation, reaching identical concentrations. The placenta metabolized pentoxifylline into its active metabolite lisofylline (M1), which was released into both circulations. In healthy placentas, pentoxifylline potentiated cAMP- and cGMP-induced vasodilation, as well as causing vasodilation by adenosine A(1) antagonism and via NO synthase and PKG. Pentoxifylline also reduced inflammatory factors secretion. In pre-eclamptic placentas, we observed that its vasodilator capacity was preserved, however not via NO-PKG but likely through adenosine signalling. Pentoxifylline neither potentiated vasodilation through cAMP and cGMP, nor suppressed the release of inflammatory factors from these placentas. Conclusion and Implications Pentoxifylline is transferred across and metabolized by the placenta. Its beneficial effects on the NO pathway and inflammation are not retained in pre-eclampsia, limiting its application in this disease, although it could be useful for other placenta-related disorders. Future studies might focus on selective A(1) receptor antagonists as a new treatment for pre-eclampsia.
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- 2022
31. Placental Tissue Destruction and Insufficiency From COVID-19 Causes Stillbirth and Neonatal Death From Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury : A Study of 68 Cases With SARS-CoV-2 Placentitis From 12 Countries
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Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., Zaigham, Mehreen, Schwartz, David A., Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babal, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Carles Ferreres, Joan, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gergis, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Cecilia Helguera-Repetto, A., Holmström, Sandra, Liliane Irles, Claudine, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamas, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T., Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C., Roberts, Drucilla J., Saad, Ali G., Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K., Simpson, Preston R., Thomas, Kristen, Yolotzin Valdespino-Vazquez, M., van der Meeren, Lotte E., Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M., Watkins, Jaclyn C., and Zaigham, Mehreen
- Abstract
Context: Perinatal death is an increasingly important problem as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic continues, but the mechanism of death has been unclear. Objective: To evaluate the role of the placenta in causing stillbirth and neonatal death following maternal infection with COVID-19 and confirmed placental positivity for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Design: Case-based retrospective clinicopathologic analysis by a multinational group of 44 perinatal specialists from 12 countries of placental and autopsy pathology findings from 64 stillborns and 4 neonatal deaths having placentas testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 following delivery to mothers with COVID-19. Results: Of the 3 findings constituting SARS-CoV-2 placentitis, all 68 placentas had increased fibrin deposition and villous trophoblast necrosis and 66 had chronic histiocytic intervillositis. Sixty-three placentas had massive perivillous fibrin deposition. Severe destructive placental disease from SARS-CoV-2 placentitis averaged 77.7% tissue involvement. Other findings included multiple intervillous thrombi (37%; 25 of 68) and chronic villitis (32%; 22 of 68). The majority (19; 63%) of the 30 autopsies revealed no significant fetal abnormalities except for intrauterine hypoxia and asphyxia. Among all 68 cases, SARS-CoV-2 was detected from a body specimen in 16 of 28 cases tested, most frequently from nasopharyngeal swabs. Four autopsied stillborns had SARS-CoV-2 identified in internal organs. Conclusions: The pathology abnormalities composing SARS-CoV-2 placentitis cause widespread and severe placental destruction resulting in placental malperfusion and insufficiency. In these cases, intrauterine and perinatal death likely results directly from placental insufficiency and fetal hypoxic-ischemic injury. There was no evidence that SARS-CoV-2 involvement of the fetus had a role in causing these deaths.
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- 2022
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32. The Impact of Maternal Prenatal Stress Related to the COVID-19 Pandemic during the First 1000 Days:A Historical Perspective
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Schoenmakers, Sam, Verweij, E. J., Beijers, Roseriet, Bijma, Hilmar H., Been, Jasper V., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Koopmans, Marion P.G., Reiss, Irwin K.M., Steegers, Eric A.P., Schoenmakers, Sam, Verweij, E. J., Beijers, Roseriet, Bijma, Hilmar H., Been, Jasper V., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Koopmans, Marion P.G., Reiss, Irwin K.M., and Steegers, Eric A.P.
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The COVID-19 pandemic has a major impact on society, particularly affecting its vulnerable members, including pregnant women and their unborn children. Pregnant mothers reported fear of infection, fear of vertical transmission, fear of poor birth and child outcomes, social isolation, uncertainty about their partner’s presence during medical appointments and delivery, increased domestic abuse, and other collateral damage, including vaccine hesitancy. Accordingly, pregnant women’s known vulnerability for mental health problems has become a concern during the COVID-19 pandemic, also because of the known effects of prenatal stress for the unborn child. The current narrative review provides a historical overview of transgenerational effects of exposure to disasters during pregnancy, and the role of maternal prenatal stress. We place these effects into the perspective of the COVID-19 pandemic. Hereby, we aim to draw attention to the psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women of reproductive age (15–49 year) and its potential associated short-term and long-term consequences for the health of children who are conceived, carried, and born during this pandemic. Timely detection and intervention during the first 1000 days is essential to reduce the burden of transgenerational effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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- 2022
33. Fatal Early-onset Sepsis Caused by Intrauterine Transmission of Serogroup Y Meningococcus
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Achten, Niek B., Been, Jasper V., Schoenmakers, Sam, Vermont, Clementien L., Verdijk, Robert M., Reiss, Irwin K.M., Taal, H. Rob, Achten, Niek B., Been, Jasper V., Schoenmakers, Sam, Vermont, Clementien L., Verdijk, Robert M., Reiss, Irwin K.M., and Taal, H. Rob
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Infections by meningococcal species are extremely rare in the first days of life. We present a fatal case of early-onset sepsis presenting at birth, caused by intrauterine transmission of serogroup Y N. meningitidis, evidenced clinically and histologically by corresponding chorioamnionitis and N. meningitidis-positive amniotic fluid. This case confirms a long-standing suspicion that N. meningitidis can be transmitted in utero.
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- 2022
34. The Impact of Preconception Gastric Bypass Surgery on Maternal Micronutrient Status before and during Pregnancy:A Retrospective Cohort Study in the Netherlands between 2009 and 2019
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Snoek, Katinka, van de Woestijne, Nadia, Willemsen, Sten, Klaassen, René, Galjaard, Sander, Laven, Joop, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine, Schoenmakers, Sam, Snoek, Katinka, van de Woestijne, Nadia, Willemsen, Sten, Klaassen, René, Galjaard, Sander, Laven, Joop, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine, and Schoenmakers, Sam
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Post-bariatric weight loss can cause iatrogenic malnutrition and micronutrient depletion. In this study, we evaluated the impact of gastric bypass surgery (GB) and multivitamin supplement use on maternal micronutrient status before and across pregnancy. A retrospective medical chart review of 197 singleton pregnancies after GB with a due date between 2009 and 2019 was performed at a bariatric expertise center in the Netherlands. Hemoglobin, calcium, iron status, folate, vitamin D, vitamin B12 and ferritin levels were determined before and after GB during standard follow-up and at all gestational trimesters and analyzed using linear mixed models. Patients were prescribed standard multivitamin supplements or multivitamins specifically developed for post-bariatric patients (FitForMe WLS Forte (FFM)). Overall, hemoglobin and calcium levels decreased after surgery and during pregnancy, whereas folate, vitamin D, and vitamin B12 levels increased, and iron levels remained stable. FFM use was associated with higher hemoglobin, folate, vitamin D, and ferritin levels. In conclusion, through adequate supplementation and follow-up, GB does not have to result in impaired micronutrient status. Supplements developed specifically for post-bariatric patients generally result in higher micronutrient values than regular multivitamins before and during preg-nancy. These data emphasize the urgent need for nutritional counseling including dietary and multivitamin supplement advise for post-bariatric women contemplating and during pregnancy.
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- 2022
35. Placental Tissue Destruction and Insufficiency from COVID-19 Causes Stillbirth and Neonatal Death from Hypoxic-Ischemic Injury: A Study of 68 Cases with SARS-CoV-2 Placentitis from 12 Countries
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Pathologie Pathologen staf, Schwartz, David A, Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babál, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Ferreres, Joan Carles, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gerges, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Helguera-Repetto, A Cecilia, Holmström, Sandra, Irles, Claudine Liliane, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamás, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T, Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C, Roberts, Drucilla J, Saad, Ali G, Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K, Simpson, Preston R, Thomas, Kristen, Valdespino-Vázquez, M Yolotzin, van der Meeren, Lotte E, Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M, Watkins, Jaclyn C, Zaigham, Mehreen, Pathologie Pathologen staf, Schwartz, David A, Avvad-Portari, Elyzabeth, Babál, Pavel, Baldewijns, Marcella, Blomberg, Marie, Bouachba, Amine, Camacho, Jessica, Collardeau-Frachon, Sophie, Colson, Arthur, Dehaene, Isabelle, Ferreres, Joan Carles, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Garrido-Pontnou, Marta, Gerges, Hazem, Hargitai, Beata, Helguera-Repetto, A Cecilia, Holmström, Sandra, Irles, Claudine Liliane, Leijonhfvud, Åsa, Libbrecht, Sasha, Marton, Tamás, McEntagart, Noel, Molina, James T, Morotti, Raffaella, Nadal, Alfons, Navarro, Alexandra, Nelander, Maria, Oviedo, Angelica, Oyamada Otani, Andre Ricardo, Papadogiannakis, Nikos, Petersen, Astrid C, Roberts, Drucilla J, Saad, Ali G, Sand, Anna, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sehn, Jennifer K, Simpson, Preston R, Thomas, Kristen, Valdespino-Vázquez, M Yolotzin, van der Meeren, Lotte E, Van Dorpe, Jo, Verdijk, Robert M, Watkins, Jaclyn C, and Zaigham, Mehreen
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- 2022
36. Hofbauer cells and COVID-19 in pregnancy:Molecular pathology analysis of villous macrophages, endothelial cells, and placental findings from 22 placentas infected by SARS-CoV-2 with and without fetal transmission
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Schwartz, David A., Baldewijns, Marcella, Benachi, Alexandra, Bugatti, Mattia, Bulfamante, Gaetano, Cheng, Ke, Collins, Rebecca R.J., Debelenko, Larisa, de Luca, Danièle, Facchetti, Fabio, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Levitan, Daniel, Linn, Rebecca L., Marcelis, Lukas, Morotti, Denise, Morotti, Raffaella, Patanè, Luisa, Prevot, Sophie, Pulinx, Bianca, Saad, Ali G., Schoenmakers, Sam, Strybol, David, Thomas, Kristen, Tosi, Delfina, Toto, Valentina, van der Meeren, Lotte E., Verdijk, Robert M., Vivanti, Alexandre J., Zaigham, Mehreen, Schwartz, David A., Baldewijns, Marcella, Benachi, Alexandra, Bugatti, Mattia, Bulfamante, Gaetano, Cheng, Ke, Collins, Rebecca R.J., Debelenko, Larisa, de Luca, Danièle, Facchetti, Fabio, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Levitan, Daniel, Linn, Rebecca L., Marcelis, Lukas, Morotti, Denise, Morotti, Raffaella, Patanè, Luisa, Prevot, Sophie, Pulinx, Bianca, Saad, Ali G., Schoenmakers, Sam, Strybol, David, Thomas, Kristen, Tosi, Delfina, Toto, Valentina, van der Meeren, Lotte E., Verdijk, Robert M., Vivanti, Alexandre J., and Zaigham, Mehreen
- Abstract
Context.-SARS-CoV-2 can undergo maternal-fetal transmission, heightening interest in the placental pathology findings from this infection. Transplacental SARS-CoV-2 transmission is typically accompanied by chronic histiocytic intervillositis together with necrosis and positivity of syncytiotrophoblast for SARS-CoV-2. Hofbauer cells are placental macrophages that have been involved in viral diseases, including HIV and Zika virus, but their involvement in SARS-CoV-2 is unknown. Objective.-To determine whether SARS-CoV-2 can extend beyond the syncytiotrophoblast to enter Hofbauer cells, endothelium, and other villous stromal cells in infected placentas of liveborn and stillborn infants. Design.-Case-based retrospective analysis by 29 perinatal and molecular pathology specialists of placental findings from a preselected cohort of 22 SARS-CoV-2-infected placentas delivered to pregnant women testing positive for SARS-CoV-2 from 7 countries. Molecular pathology methods were used to investigate viral involvement of Hofbauer cells, villous capillary endothelium, syncytiotrophoblast, and other fetal-derived cells. Results.-Chronic histiocytic intervillositis and trophoblast necrosis were present in all 22 placentas (100%). SARS-CoV-2 was identified in Hofbauer cells from 4 of 22 placentas (18.2%). Villous capillary endothelial staining was positive in 2 of 22 cases (9.1%), both of which also had viral positivity in Hofbauer cells. Syncytiotrophoblast staining occurred in 21 of 22 placentas (95.5%). Hofbauer cell hyperplasia was present in 3 of 22 placentas (13.6%). In the 7 cases having documented transplacental infection of the fetus, 2 (28.6%) occurred in placentas with Hofbauer cell staining positive for SARS-CoV-2. Conclusions.-SARS-CoV-2 can extend beyond the trophoblast into the villous stroma, involving Hofbauer cells and capillary endothelial cells, in a small number of infected placentas. Most cases of SARS-CoV-2 tra
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- 2021
37. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 placental infection and inflammation leading to fetal distress and neonatal multi-organ failure in an asymptomatic woman
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Schoenmakers, Sam, Snijder, Pauline, Verdijk, Robert M., Kuiken, Thijs, Kamphuis, Sylvia S.M., Koopman, Laurens P., Krasemann, Thomas B., Rousian, Melek, Broekhuizen, Michelle, Steegers, Eric A.P., Koopmans, Marion P.G., Fraaij, Pieter L.A., Reiss, Irwin K.M., Schoenmakers, Sam, Snijder, Pauline, Verdijk, Robert M., Kuiken, Thijs, Kamphuis, Sylvia S.M., Koopman, Laurens P., Krasemann, Thomas B., Rousian, Melek, Broekhuizen, Michelle, Steegers, Eric A.P., Koopmans, Marion P.G., Fraaij, Pieter L.A., and Reiss, Irwin K.M.
- Abstract
Background: In general, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection during pregnancy is not considered to be an increased risk for severe maternal outcomes but has been associated with an increased risk for fetal distress. Maternal-fetal transmission of SARS-CoV-2 was initially deemed uncertain; however, recently a few cases of vertical transmission have been reported. The intrauterine mechanisms, besides direct vertical transmission, leading to the perinatal adverse outcomes are not well understood. Methods: Multiple maternal, placental, and neonatal swabs were collected for the detection of SARS-CoV-2 using real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). Serology of immunoglobulins against SARS-CoV-2 was tested in maternal, umbilical cord, and neonatal blood. Placental examination included immunohistochemical investigation against SARS-CoV-2 antigen expression, with SARS-CoV-2 ribonucleic acid (RNA) in situ hybridization and transmission electron microscopy. Results: RT-qPCRs of the oropharynx, maternal blood, vagina, placenta, and urine were all positive over a period of 6 days, while breast milk, feces, and all neonatal samples tested negative. Placental findings showed the presence of SARS-CoV-2 particles with generalized inflammation characterized by histiocytic intervillositis with diffuse perivillous fibrin depositions with damage to the syncytiotrophoblasts. Conclusions: Placental infection by SARS-CoV-2 leads to fibrin depositions hampering fetal-maternal gas exchange with resulting fetal distress necessitating a premature emergency cesarean section. Postpartum, the neonate showed a fetal or pediatric inflammatory multisystem-like syndrome with coronary artery ectasia temporarily associated with SARS-CoV-2 for which admittance and care on the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) were required, despite being negative for SARS-CoV-2. This highlights the need for awareness of adverse fetal and neonatal outcomes during
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- 2021
38. Systemic lupus erythematosus and COVID-19 during pregnancy
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Smeele, Hieronymus T.W., Perez-Garcia, Luis F., Grimminck, Koen, Schoenmakers, Sam, Mulders, Annemarie G.M.G.J., Dolhain, Radboud J.E.M., Smeele, Hieronymus T.W., Perez-Garcia, Luis F., Grimminck, Koen, Schoenmakers, Sam, Mulders, Annemarie G.M.G.J., and Dolhain, Radboud J.E.M.
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Background: The ongoing corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is having a worldwide impact. Valuable information on the clinical characteristics of COVID-19 in pregnant patients with an autoimmune disease, such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), is currently lacking. Methods: Herein, we describe the clinical presentation of 2 pregnant patients with SLE and mild symptomatic COVID-19 infection. Results: In both pregnant SLE patients, a watchful-waiting approach without initiation of treatment for COVID-19 was taken. No adverse outcomes were reported and both pregnancies resulted in healthy neonates born at term. In one patient we observed a flare in SLE disease activity, most likely attributed to discontinuing SLE treatment. Conclusion: Our report highlights the importance of multidisciplinary collaboration between health care professionals as well as individualized treatment decisions during unprecedented periods such as the current COVID-19 pandemic. Discontinuation of immunosuppressive drugs during the acute phase of a COVID-19 infection should be considered on a case-by-case basis. Maternal treatment decisions should be in line with current recommendations for treatment of rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases during COVID-19 infection and in line with treatment of COVID- 19 during pregnancy.
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- 2021
39. Cohort Profile Update:The Rotterdam Periconceptional Cohort and embryonic and fetal measurements using 3D ultrasound and virtual reality techniques
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Rousian, Melek, Schoenmakers, Sam, Eggink, Alex J., Gootjes, Dionne V., Koning, Anton H.J., Koster, Maria P.H., Mulders, Annemarie G.M.G.J., Baart, Esther B., Reiss, Irwin K.M., Laven, Joop S.E., Steegers, Eric A.P., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Rousian, Melek, Schoenmakers, Sam, Eggink, Alex J., Gootjes, Dionne V., Koning, Anton H.J., Koster, Maria P.H., Mulders, Annemarie G.M.G.J., Baart, Esther B., Reiss, Irwin K.M., Laven, Joop S.E., Steegers, Eric A.P., and Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M.
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- 2021
40. The effects of bariatric surgery on periconception maternal health:A systematic review and meta-analysis
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Snoek, Katinka M., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Hazebroek, Eric J., Willemsen, Sten P., Galjaard, Sander, Laven, Joop S.E., Schoenmakers, Sam, Snoek, Katinka M., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Hazebroek, Eric J., Willemsen, Sten P., Galjaard, Sander, Laven, Joop S.E., and Schoenmakers, Sam
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Worldwide, the prevalence of obesity in women of reproductive age is increasing. Bariatric surgery is currently viewed as the most effective, long-term solution for this problem. Preconception bariatric surgery can reduce the prevalence of obesity-related subfertility and adverse maternal, pregnancy and birth outcomes. Maternal health during the periconception period is crucial for optimal gametogenesis and for embryonic and fetal development which also affects health in the later lives of both mother and offspring. Although preconception bariatric surgery improves several pregnancy outcomes, it can also increase the prevalence of pregnancy complications due to excessive and rapid weight loss. This can lead to iatrogenic malnutrition with vitamin deficiencies and derangements in metabolic and endocrine homeostasis. Thus, bariatric surgery can greatly influence periconception maternal health with consequences for reproduction, pregnancy and health in later life. However, its influence on periconception maternal health itself has never been reviewed systematically. OBJECTIVE AND RATIONALE: The aim of this review was to investigate associations between bariatric surgery and determinants of periconception maternal health such as endocrine changes, fertility, vitamin status, irregular menstrual cycles, miscarriages and congenital malformations. SEARCH METHODS: Medline, Embase, PubMed, Web of Science, Google Scholar and the Cochrane databases were used for the literature search until 1 November 2020. The search strategy terms included, among others, bariatric surgery, hormones, fertility, malformations, miscarriages and vitamin status. We searched for human studies that were written in English. Abstracts, reviews, meta-analyses and conference papers were excluded. The ErasmusAGE score was used to assess the quality of the included studies. OUTCOMES: A total of 51 articles were analysed. The mean quality score was 5 (range 2-8). After bariatric surgery, horm
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- 2021
41. Maternal one-carbon metabolism during the periconceptional period and human foetal brain growth:A systematic review
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Rubini, Eleonora, Baijens, Inge M.M., Horánszky, Alex, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sinclair, Kevin D., Zana, Melinda, Dinnyés, András, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Rousian, Melek, Rubini, Eleonora, Baijens, Inge M.M., Horánszky, Alex, Schoenmakers, Sam, Sinclair, Kevin D., Zana, Melinda, Dinnyés, András, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., and Rousian, Melek
- Abstract
The maternal environment during the periconceptional period influences foetal growth and development, in part, via epigenetic mechanisms moderated by one-carbon metabolic pathways. During embryonic development, one-carbon metabolism is involved in brain development and neural programming. Derangements in one-carbon metabolism increase (i) the short-term risk of embryonic neural tube-related defects and (ii) long-term childhood behaviour, cognition, and autism spectrum disorders. Here we investigate the association between maternal one-carbon metabolism and foetal and neonatal brain growth and development. Database searching resulted in 26 articles eligible for inclusion. Maternal vitamin B6, vitamin B12, homocysteine, and choline were not associated with foetal and/or neonatal head growth. First-trimester maternal plasma folate within the normal range (>17 nmol/L) associated with increased foetal head size and head growth, and high erythrocyte folate (1538–1813 nmol/L) with increased cerebellar growth, whereas folate deficiency (<7 nmol/L) associated with a reduced foetal brain volume. Preconceptional folic acid supplement use and specific dietary patterns (associated with increased B vitamins and low homocysteine) increased foetal head size. Although early pregnancy maternal folate appears to be the most independent predictor of foetal brain growth, there is insufficient data to confirm the link between maternal folate and offspring risks for neurodevelopmental diseases.
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- 2021
42. The Potential of Metabolomic Analyses as Predictive Biomarkers of Preterm Delivery:A Systematic Review
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Ronde, Emma, Reiss, Irwin K.M., Hankemeier, Thomas, De Meij, Tim G., Frerichs, Nina, Schoenmakers, Sam, Ronde, Emma, Reiss, Irwin K.M., Hankemeier, Thomas, De Meij, Tim G., Frerichs, Nina, and Schoenmakers, Sam
- Abstract
Scope: as the leading cause of perinatal mortality and morbidity worldwide, the impact of premature delivery is undisputable. Thus far, non-invasive, cost-efficient and accurate biochemical markers to predict preterm delivery are scarce. The aim of this systematic review is to investigate the potential of non-invasive metabolomic biomarkers for the prediction of preterm delivery. Methods and Results: Databases were systematically searched from March 2019 up to May 2020 resulting in 4062 articles, of which 45 were retrieved for full-text assessment. The resulting metabolites used for further analyses, such as ferritin, prostaglandin and different vitamins were obtained from different human anatomical compartments or sources (vaginal fluid, serum, urine and umbilical cord) and compared between groups of women with preterm and term delivery. None of the reported metabolites showed uniform results, however, a combination of metabolomics biomarkers may have potential to predict preterm delivery and need to be evaluated in future studies.
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- 2021
43. Unique severe covid-19 placental signature independent of severity of clinical maternal symptoms
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Husen, Marjolein F, van der Meeren, Lotte E, Verdijk, Robert M, Fraaij, Pieter L A, van der Eijk, Annemiek A, Koopmans, Marion P G, Freeman, Liv, Bogers, Hein, Trietsch, Marjolijn D, Reiss, Irwin K M, DeKoninck, Philip L J, Schoenmakers, Sam, Husen, Marjolein F, van der Meeren, Lotte E, Verdijk, Robert M, Fraaij, Pieter L A, van der Eijk, Annemiek A, Koopmans, Marion P G, Freeman, Liv, Bogers, Hein, Trietsch, Marjolijn D, Reiss, Irwin K M, DeKoninck, Philip L J, and Schoenmakers, Sam
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although the risk for transplacental transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is rare, placental infections with adverse functional consequences have been reported. This study aims to analyse histological placental findings in pregnancies complicated by SARS-CoV-2 infection and investigate its correlation with clinical symptoms and perinatal outcomes. We want to determine which pregnancies are at-risk to prevent adverse pregnancy outcomes related to COVID-19 in the future.METHODS: A prospective, longitudinal, multicentre, cohort study. All pregnant women presenting between April 2020 and March 2021 with a nasopharyngeal RT-PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection were included. Around delivery, maternal, foetal and placental PCR samples were collected. Placental pathology was correlated with clinical maternal characteristics of COVID-19.RESULTS: Thirty-six patients were included, 33 singleton pregnancies (n = 33, 92%) and three twin pregnancies (n = 3, 8%). Twenty-four (62%) placentas showed at least one abnormality. Four placentas (4/39, 10%) showed placental staining positive for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 accompanied by a unique combination of diffuse, severe inflammatory placental changes with massive perivillous fibrin depositions, necrosis of syncytiotrophoblast, diffuse chronic intervillositis, and a specific, unprecedented CD20+ B-cell infiltration. This SARS-CoV-2 placental signature seems to correlate with foetal distress (75% vs. 15.6%, p = 0.007) but not with the severity of maternal COVID-19 disease.CONCLUSION: We describe a unique placental signature in pregnant patients with COVID-19, which has not been reported in a historical cohort. We show that the foetal environment can be seriously compromised by disruption of placental function due to local, devastating SARS-CoV-2 infection. Maternal clinical symptoms did not predict the severity of the SARS-CoV-2-related placental signature, resulting in a lack of adequate identification of mat
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- 2021
44. Periconceptional maternal and paternal homocysteine levels and early utero-placental (vascular) growth trajectories:The Rotterdam periconception cohort
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Hoek, Jeffrey, Schoenmakers, Sam, Ringelberg, Bianca, Reijnders, Igna F., Willemsen, Sten P., De Rijke, Yolanda B., Mulders, Annemarie G.M.G.J., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Hoek, Jeffrey, Schoenmakers, Sam, Ringelberg, Bianca, Reijnders, Igna F., Willemsen, Sten P., De Rijke, Yolanda B., Mulders, Annemarie G.M.G.J., and Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M.
- Abstract
Introduction: Maternal elevated plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) is involved in the origin of several placenta-related pregnancy complications. The first trimester is the most sensitive period for placentation influenced by maternal and paternal health. The aim is to study associations between periconceptional parental tHcy levels and utero-placental growth trajectories in the first trimester of pregnancy. Methods: Pregnant women and their partners were enrolled before 10 weeks of gestation in the Virtual Placenta study as subcohort of the Rotterdam periconception cohort (Predict study). A total of 190 women with a singleton pregnancy, of which 109 conceived naturally and 81 after IVF/ICSI treatment, were included. We measured serial utero-placental vascular volumes (uPVV) and placental volumes (PV) at 7, 9 and 11 weeks of gestation. First-trimester trajectories of PV were also measured in 662 pregnancies from the total Predict study. Results: Comparing all participants of the virtual placenta study, no association between maternal tHcy and uPVV was observed. However, in IVF/ICSI pregnancies sub-analyses showed significantly negative associations between maternal tHcy in the 3rd and 4th quartile and uPVV trajectories (beta: −0.38 (95%CI -0.74 to −0.02) and beta: −0.42 (95% CI -0.78 to −0.05), respectively) with the 1st quartile as reference. Analysis in the total Predict cohort showed similar negative associations for the total study population. Discussion: Periconceptional high maternal tHcy levels are associated with smaller placental growth trajectories depicted as PV and uPVV in the first trimester of pregnancy. The stronger negative associations with uPVV in IVF/ICSI pregnancies underline the need for further investigation.
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- 2021
45. Impact of Bariatric surgery on EmbrYONic, fetal and placental Development (BEYOND):Protocol for a prospective cohort study embedded in the Rotterdam periconceptional cohort
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Snoek, Katinka M., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Klaassen, René A., Laven, Joop S.E., Schoenmakers, Sam, Snoek, Katinka M., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Klaassen, René A., Laven, Joop S.E., and Schoenmakers, Sam
- Abstract
Introduction The worldwide obesity epidemic has resulted in a rise of bariatric surgery in women of reproductive age, which can lead to â € iatrogenic undernutrition'. Long-lasting undernutrition can affect maternal health, pregnancy outcomes and offspring. We hypothesise that embryonic and placental growth are impaired in pregnancies after bariatric surgery due to the changed nutritional and microbiome dynamics. Therefore, our aim is to conduct the Bariatrics and EmbrYONic Development (BEYOND) study to investigate parameters of maternal nutritional and health status after bariatric surgery, both periconceptionally and during pregnancy, particularly concentrating on embryonic and fetal growth trajectories as well as placental development. Methods and analysis We designed a single-centre prospective, observational cohort, which investigates the iatrogenic nutritional and health status of women after bariatric surgery, periconceptionally and during pregnancy. The BEYOND study is embedded in the Rotterdam Periconceptional Cohort, a tertiary hospital-based birth cohort study. Eligible participants are women planning pregnancy or <12+0 weeks pregnant, ≥18 and ≤45 years of age, who have undergone bariatric surgery (cases) or without prior bariatric surgery (controls) and their male partners. Medical charts will be reviewed and questionnaires regarding general health, lifestyle and food intake will be collected. Moreover, we will perform serial three-dimensional ultrasounds to assess embryonic growth and placental development and two-dimensional ultrasounds for fetal growth assessment. The microbiome, including the virome, and blood samples will be sampled during the preconception period and in each trimester. Multivariable linear mixed model analyses will be used to assess the associations between bariatric surgery and pregnancy outcomes. Ethics and dissemination This proposal was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee from the Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlan
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- 2021
46. Optimizing the periconception lifestyle of women with overweight using a blended personalized care intervention combining ehealth and face-to-face counseling (efuse):Protocol for a randomized controlled trial
- Author
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Van der Windt, Melissa, Schoenmakers, Sam, Willemsen, Sten, Van Rossem, Lenie, Steegers-Theunissen, Régine, Van der Windt, Melissa, Schoenmakers, Sam, Willemsen, Sten, Van Rossem, Lenie, and Steegers-Theunissen, Régine
- Abstract
Background: Maternal overweight has a substantial impact on reproductive, maternal, pregnancy, and neonatal outcomes with long-term and transgenerational health consequences. Interventions that aim to optimize periconception maternal lifestyle can improve maternal and fetal health during pregnancy and throughout the life course. However, it remains difficult to change and adopt adequate lifestyle behaviors. We hypothesize that additional psychological therapy targeting cognitive and affective factors substantially contribute to the effectiveness of these interventions. Objective: The proposed study aims to examine the feasibility and effectiveness of a blended personalized periconception lifestyle care intervention with additional psychological therapy aimed at women with a BMI≥25 and who are contemplating pregnancy or are already pregnant (≤12 weeks) in reducing inadequate lifestyle behaviors and improving early and late pregnancy outcome. Methods: The eHealth and Face-to-face Counseling (eFUSE) study follows a single-center two-arm randomized controlled trial design at the Erasmus MC, University Medical Center, with a multicenter regional referral. The female patients with overweight (BMI≥25), together with their male partner, will be stratified by pregnancy status (preconception vs pregnant) and randomized to receive either the blended personalized periconception lifestyle care intervention with additional psychological therapy (n=313) or usual care (n=313). The primary outcome is a change in the lifestyle risk score (between baseline and 24 weeks) between the randomization arms (difference in differences). Secondary outcomes include measurements defined as most relevant by the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement, including behavioral determinants, patient satisfaction, provider feasibility, and maternal pregnancy and neonatal complications. Results: The study will be open for recruitment from Fall 2021 onward. Data collection is expected
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- 2021
47. Prenatal growth trajectories and birth outcomes after frozen–thawed extended culture embryo transfer and fresh embryo transfer:the Rotterdam Periconception Cohort
- Author
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van Duijn, Linette, Hoek, Jeffrey, Rousian, Melek, Baart, Esther B., Willemsen, Sten P., Laven, Joop S.E., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., Schoenmakers, Sam, van Duijn, Linette, Hoek, Jeffrey, Rousian, Melek, Baart, Esther B., Willemsen, Sten P., Laven, Joop S.E., Steegers-Theunissen, Régine P.M., and Schoenmakers, Sam
- Abstract
Research question: Are there differences in prenatal growth trajectories and birth outcomes between singleton pregnancies conceived after IVF treatment with frozen–thawed extended culture embryo transfer at day 5, fresh embryo transfer at day 3 or naturally conceived pregnancies? Design: From a prospective hospital-based cohort, 859 singleton pregnancies were selected, including 133 conceived after IVF with frozen–thawed embryo transfer, 276 after fresh embryo transfer, and 450 naturally conceived pregnancies. Longitudinal 3D ultrasound scans were performed at 7, 9 and 11 weeks of gestation for offline crown–rump length (CRL) and embryonic volume measurements. Second trimester estimated fetal weight was based on growth parameters obtained during the routine fetal anomaly scan at 20 weeks of gestation. Birth outcome data were collected from medical records. Results: No differences regarding embryonic growth trajectories were observed between frozen–thawed and fresh embryo transfer. Birthweight percentiles after fresh embryo transfer were lower than after frozen–thawed embryo transfer (38.0 versus 48.0; P = 0.046, respectively). The prevalence of non-iatrogenic preterm birth (PTB) was significantly lower in pregnancies resulting from fresh embryo transfer compared with frozen–thawed embryo transfer (4.7% versus 10.9%; P = 0.026, respectively). Compared with naturally conceived pregnancies, birthweight percentiles and percentage of non-iatrogenic PTB were significantly lower in pregnancies after fresh embryo transfer and gestational age at birth was significantly higher. Conclusions: This study shows that embryonic growth is comparable between singleton pregnancies conceived after fresh and frozen–thawed embryo transfer. The lower relative birthweight and PTB rate in pregnancies after fresh embryo transfer than after frozen–thawed embryo transfer and naturally conceived pregnancies warrants further investigation.
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- 2021
48. Epidemiology and (Patho)physiology of folic acid supplement use in obese women before and during pregnancy
- Author
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van der Windt, Melissa, Schoenmakers, Sam, van Rijn, Bas, Galjaard, Sander, Steegers - Theunissen, Régine, van Rossem, Lenie, van der Windt, Melissa, Schoenmakers, Sam, van Rijn, Bas, Galjaard, Sander, Steegers - Theunissen, Régine, and van Rossem, Lenie
- Abstract
Preconception folic acid supplement use is a well-known method of primary prevention of neural tube defects (NTDs). Obese women are at a higher risk for having a child with a NTD. As different international recommendations on folic acid supplement use for obese women before and during pregnancy exist, this narrative review provides an overview of epidemiology of folate deficiency in obese (pre)pregnant women, elaborates on potential mechanisms underlying folate deficiency, and discusses considerations for the usage of higher doses of folic acid supplements. Women with obesity more often suffer from an absolute folate deficiency, as they are less compliant to periconceptional folic acid supplement use recommendations. In addition, their dietary folate intake is limited due to an unbalanced diet (relative malnutrition). The association of obesity and NTDs also seems to be independent of folate intake, with studies suggesting an increased need of folate (relative deficiency) due to derangements involved in other pathways. The relative folate deficiency, as a result of an increased metabolic need for folate in obese women, can be due to: (1) low-grade chronic inflammation (2) insulin resistance, (3) inositol, and (4) dysbiotic gut microbiome, which plays a role in folate production and uptake. In all these pathways, the folate-dependent one-carbon metabolism is involved. In conclusion, scientific evidence of the involvement of several folate-related pathways implies to increase the recommended folic acid supplementation in obese women. However, the physiological uptake of synthetic folic acid is limited and side-effects of unmetabolized folic acid in mothers and offspring, in particular variations in epigenetic (re)programming with long-term health effects, cannot be excluded. Therefore, we emphasize on the urgent need for further research and preconception personalized counseling on folate status, lifestyle, and medical conditions.
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- 2021
49. Unique Severe COVID-19 Placental Signature Independent of Severity of Clinical Maternal Symptoms
- Author
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Pathologie Pathologen staf, Husen, Marjolein F, van der Meeren, Lotte E, Verdijk, Robert M, Fraaij, Pieter L A, van der Eijk, Annemiek A, Koopmans, Marion P G, Freeman, Liv, Bogers, Hein, Trietsch, Marjolijn D, Reiss, Irwin K M, DeKoninck, Philip L J, Schoenmakers, Sam, Pathologie Pathologen staf, Husen, Marjolein F, van der Meeren, Lotte E, Verdijk, Robert M, Fraaij, Pieter L A, van der Eijk, Annemiek A, Koopmans, Marion P G, Freeman, Liv, Bogers, Hein, Trietsch, Marjolijn D, Reiss, Irwin K M, DeKoninck, Philip L J, and Schoenmakers, Sam
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- 2021
50. Hofbauer cells and COVID-19 in pregnancy: Molecular pathology analysis of villous macrophages, endothelial cells, and placental findings from 22 placentas infected by SARS-CoV-2 with and without fetal transmission
- Author
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Pathologie Pathologen staf, Schwartz, David A, Baldewijns, Marcella, Benachi, Alexandra, Bugatti, Mattia, Bulfamante, Gaetano, Cheng, Ke, Collins, Rebecca R J, Debelenko, Larisa, De Luca, Danièle, Facchetti, Fabio, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Levitan, Daniel, Linn, Rebecca L, Marcelis, Lukas, Morotti, Denise, Morotti, Raffaella, Patanè, Luisa, Prevot, Sophie, Pulinx, Bianca, Saad, Ali G, Schoenmakers, Sam, Strybol, David, Thomas, Kristen, Tosi, Delfina, Toto, Valentina, van der Meeren, Lotte E, Verdijk, Robert M, Vivanti, Alexandre J, Zaigham, Mehreen, Pathologie Pathologen staf, Schwartz, David A, Baldewijns, Marcella, Benachi, Alexandra, Bugatti, Mattia, Bulfamante, Gaetano, Cheng, Ke, Collins, Rebecca R J, Debelenko, Larisa, De Luca, Danièle, Facchetti, Fabio, Fitzgerald, Brendan, Levitan, Daniel, Linn, Rebecca L, Marcelis, Lukas, Morotti, Denise, Morotti, Raffaella, Patanè, Luisa, Prevot, Sophie, Pulinx, Bianca, Saad, Ali G, Schoenmakers, Sam, Strybol, David, Thomas, Kristen, Tosi, Delfina, Toto, Valentina, van der Meeren, Lotte E, Verdijk, Robert M, Vivanti, Alexandre J, and Zaigham, Mehreen
- Published
- 2021
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