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Published in: BMC Clinical Pathology 1/2016

Open Access 01-12-2016 | Research article

Quantitative assessment of placental morphology may identify specific causes of stillbirth

Authors: Imogen Ptacek, Anna Smith, Ainslie Garrod, Sian Bullough, Nicola Bradley, Gauri Batra, Colin P. Sibley, Rebecca L. Jones, Paul Brownbill, Alexander E. P. Heazell

Published in: BMC Clinical Pathology | Issue 1/2016

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Abstract

Background

Stillbirth is frequently the result of pathological processes involving the placenta. Understanding the significance of specific lesions is hindered by qualitative subjective evaluation. We hypothesised that quantitative assessment of placental morphology would identify alterations between different causes of stillbirth and that placental phenotype would be independent of post-mortem effects and differ between live births and stillbirths with the same condition.

Methods

Placental tissue was obtained from stillbirths with an established cause of death, those of unknown cause and live births. Image analysis was used to quantify different facets of placental structure including: syncytial nuclear aggregates (SNAs), proliferative cells, blood vessels, leukocytes and trophoblast area. These analyses were then applied to placental tissue from live births and stillbirths associated with fetal growth restriction (FGR), and to placental lobules before and after perfusion of the maternal side of the placental circulation to model post-mortem effects.

Results

Different causes of stillbirth, particularly FGR, cord accident and hypertension had altered placental morphology compared to healthy live births. FGR stillbirths had increased SNAs and trophoblast area and reduced proliferation and villous vascularity; 2 out of 10 stillbirths of unknown cause had similar placental morphology to FGR. Stillbirths with FGR had reduced vascularity, proliferation and trophoblast area compared to FGR live births. Ex vivo perfusion did not reproduce the morphological findings of stillbirth.

Conclusion

These preliminary data suggest that addition of quantitative assessment of placental morphology may distinguish between different causes of stillbirth; these changes do not appear to be due to post-mortem effects. Applying quantitative assessment in addition to qualitative assessment might reduce the proportion of unexplained stillbirths.
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Metadata
Title
Quantitative assessment of placental morphology may identify specific causes of stillbirth
Authors
Imogen Ptacek
Anna Smith
Ainslie Garrod
Sian Bullough
Nicola Bradley
Gauri Batra
Colin P. Sibley
Rebecca L. Jones
Paul Brownbill
Alexander E. P. Heazell
Publication date
01-12-2016
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Clinical Pathology / Issue 1/2016
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6890
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12907-016-0023-y

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