학술논문

Maternal obesity and sex-specific differences in placental pathology.
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Placenta
Humans
Pregnancy Complications
Obesity
Inflammation
Birth Weight
Body Mass Index
Fetal Development
Pregnancy
Sex Characteristics
Adult
Infant
Newborn
Female
Male
Chronic villitis
Fetal vascular thrombosis
Maternal obesity
Placental pathology
Infant
Newborn
Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine
Clinical Sciences
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveAdverse effects of obesity have been linked to inflammation in various tissues, but studies on placental inflammation and obesity have demonstrated conflicting findings. We sought to investigate the influence of pregravid obesity and fetal sex on placental histopathology while controlling for diabetes and hypertension.MethodsPlacental histopathology focusing on inflammatory markers of a cohort of normal weight (BMI = 20-24.9) and obese (BMI ≥ 30) patients was characterized. Demographic, obstetric and neonatal variables were assessed.Results192 normal and 231 obese women were included. Placental characteristics associated with obesity and fetal sex independent of diabetes and hypertension were placental disc weight >90(th) percentile, decreased placental efficiency, chronic villitis (CV), fetal thrombosis, and normoblastemia. Additionally, female fetuses of obese mothers had higher rates of CV and fetal thrombosis. Increasing BMI increased the risk of normoblastemia and CV. The final grade and extent of CV was significantly associated with obesity and BMI, but not fetal gender. Finally, CV was less common in large-for-gestation placentas.ConclusionsMaternal obesity results in placental overgrowth and fetal hypoxia as manifested by normoblastemia; it is also associated with an increased incidence of CV and fetal thrombosis, both more prevalent in female placentas. We have shown for the first time that the effect of maternal obesity on placental inflammation is independent of diabetes and hypertension, but significantly affected by fetal sex. Our data also point to the intriguing possibility that CV serves to normalize placental size, and potentially fetal growth, in the setting of maternal obesity.