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RESEARCH PRODUCT

CD15 – A new marker of pathological villous immaturity of the term placenta

Larissa SeidmannAleksandra NevmerzhitskayaV. GereinCharles James KirkpatrickY. KamyshanskiyT. Suhan

subject

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyEndotheliumLewis X AntigenAntigens CD34Placental insufficiencyBiologyPregnancyChronic VillitisFetal macrosomiamedicineHumansPathologicalPlacental villous immaturityAsphyxiaObstetrics and GynecologyHypoxia (medical)FucosyltransferasesPlacental Insufficiencymedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureReproductive MedicineCase-Control Studiesembryonic structuresImmunologyFemalemedicine.symptomBiomarkersDevelopmental Biology

description

Abstract Introduction Idiopathic immaturity is one of the main reasons for latent placental insufficiency and antenatal hypoxia. Postnatal identification of the immature placental phenotype may help early stratification of a heterogeneous population of newborns and individually identify risk of disease in the immediate postnatal life. The aim of the study was to determine the relevant diagnostic markers associated with pathological placental immaturity. Methods 111 tissue samples from normal and pathological term placentas with persisting villous immaturity comprised the comparative immunohistochemical study (CD15, CD34). Positive immunohistochemical reactions were quantitatively assessed in the chorionic plate and vessels of the villi of different histological type. Results We have shown that pathological villous immaturity is attended by significantly increased CD15-expression in the macro- and microvascular endothelium compared with the normal placenta. CD34-expression was not different from that in normal placentas. Discussion This paper documents the correlation of CD15+ endothelium in the macrovascular fetoplacental vessels with a severe form of villous immaturity associated with fetal hypoxia/asphyxia and erythroblastosis. Increased CD15-expression only in the microvascular segment of the fetoplacental vessels correlated with moderate villous immaturity and was associated with GDM, idiopathic fetal macrosomia and nonspecific chronic villitis. Conclusion We propose that “immature” CD15+ endothelium is an important diagnostic marker of persisting villous immaturity and chronic placental dysfunction. The level of CD15 expression in the macro- and microvasculature reflects the degree of pathological placental villous immaturity.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.placenta.2014.07.018