Biomedicines (Jun 2021)

Low Preconception Complement Levels Are Associated with Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes in a Multicenter Study of 260 Pregnancies in 197 Women with Antiphospholipid Syndrome or Carriers of Antiphospholipid Antibodies

  • Cecilia Nalli,
  • Daniele Lini,
  • Laura Andreoli,
  • Francesca Crisafulli,
  • Micaela Fredi,
  • Maria Grazia Lazzaroni,
  • Viktoria Bitsadze,
  • Antonia Calligaro,
  • Valentina Canti,
  • Roberto Caporali,
  • Francesco Carubbi,
  • Cecilia Beatrice Chighizola,
  • Paola Conigliaro,
  • Fabrizio Conti,
  • Caterina De Carolis,
  • Teresa Del Ross,
  • Maria Favaro,
  • Maria Gerosa,
  • Annamaria Iuliano,
  • Jamilya Khizroeva,
  • Alexander Makatsariya,
  • Pier Luigi Meroni,
  • Marta Mosca,
  • Melissa Padovan,
  • Roberto Perricone,
  • Patrizia Rovere-Querini,
  • Gian Domenico Sebastiani,
  • Chiara Tani,
  • Marta Tonello,
  • Simona Truglia,
  • Dina Zucchi,
  • Franco Franceschini,
  • Angela Tincani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9060671
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 671

Abstract

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Antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) can induce fetal loss in experimental animal models. Human studies did find hypocomplementemia associated with pregnancy complications in patients with antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), but these results are not unanimously confirmed. To investigate if the detection of low C3/C4 could be considered a risk factor for adverse pregnancy outcomes (APO) in APS and aPL carriers’ pregnancies we performed a multicenter study including 503 pregnancies from 11 Italian and 1 Russian centers. Data in women with APS and asymptomatic carriers with persistently positive aPL and preconception complement levels were available for 260 pregnancies. In pregnancies with low preconception C3/C4, a significantly higher prevalence of pregnancy losses was observed (p = 0.008). A subgroup analysis focusing on triple aPL-positive patients found that preconception low C3 and/or C4 levels were associated with an increased rate of pregnancy loss (p = 0.05). Our findings confirm that decreased complement levels before pregnancy are associated with increased risk of APO. This has been seen only in women with triple aPL positivity, indeed single or double positivity does not show this trend. Complement levels are cheap and easy to be measured therefore they could represent a useful aid to identify patients at increased risk of pregnancy loss.

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