open access

Vol 87, No 7 (2016)
Research paper
Published online: 2016-07-29
Get Citation

Correlation between factor VII and PAI-1 genetic variants and recurrent miscarriage

Magdalena Barlik, Agnieszka Seremak-Mrozikiewicz, Krzysztof Drews, Andrzej Klejewski, Grażyna Kurzawińska, Zdzisław Łowicki, Hubert Wolski
·
Pubmed: 27504943
·
Ginekol Pol 2016;87(7):504-509.

open access

Vol 87, No 7 (2016)
ORIGINAL PAPERS Obstetrics
Published online: 2016-07-29

Abstract

Background: Polymorphisms which are presented below may be the cause of inherited thrombophilia and may result in pregnancy loss. The hypothesis is based on a number of cardiology studies which have confirmed the involvement of these polymorphisms in thrombotic incidents.

Objectives: To evaluate the role of polymorphisms of factor VII gene (Arg353Gln, -122T > C) and PAI-1 gene (-675 4G/5G) in the etiology of recurrent miscarriage.

Material and methods: The study group included 152 women with a positive history of ≥ 2 consecutive pregnancy losses (114 and 38 women with 2 and ≥ 3 miscarriages, respectively), while 180 healthy women were recruited as controls. Genetic analysis was performed with the use of PCR/RFLP.

Results: Lower frequency of Arg353/Gln353 was observed in women with 2 and ≥ 3 miscarriages as compared to controls (21.1% vs. 23.9% and 13.2% vs. 23.9%, respectively). The frequency of Gln353 was lower in women with ≥ 3 miscarriages as compared to controls (6.6% vs. 11.9%, p = ns). The frequency of -122TT was higher in women with ≥ 3 miscarriages as compared to controls (86.84% vs. 76.67%, p = ns), whereas -122TC was more frequent in controls (13.16% vs. 22.78% in controls, p = ns). The frequency of -122T was higher in patients with ≥ 3 abortions as compared to controls (93.42% vs. 88.06%, p = ns), and -122C was observed more frequently in controls (6.58% vs. 11.94% in controls, p = ns). There were no significant differences as far as the -675 4G/5G polymorphism was concerned.

Conclusions: The obtained results suggest a possible protective role of Gln353 and -122C alleles in recurrent miscarriage.

Abstract

Background: Polymorphisms which are presented below may be the cause of inherited thrombophilia and may result in pregnancy loss. The hypothesis is based on a number of cardiology studies which have confirmed the involvement of these polymorphisms in thrombotic incidents.

Objectives: To evaluate the role of polymorphisms of factor VII gene (Arg353Gln, -122T > C) and PAI-1 gene (-675 4G/5G) in the etiology of recurrent miscarriage.

Material and methods: The study group included 152 women with a positive history of ≥ 2 consecutive pregnancy losses (114 and 38 women with 2 and ≥ 3 miscarriages, respectively), while 180 healthy women were recruited as controls. Genetic analysis was performed with the use of PCR/RFLP.

Results: Lower frequency of Arg353/Gln353 was observed in women with 2 and ≥ 3 miscarriages as compared to controls (21.1% vs. 23.9% and 13.2% vs. 23.9%, respectively). The frequency of Gln353 was lower in women with ≥ 3 miscarriages as compared to controls (6.6% vs. 11.9%, p = ns). The frequency of -122TT was higher in women with ≥ 3 miscarriages as compared to controls (86.84% vs. 76.67%, p = ns), whereas -122TC was more frequent in controls (13.16% vs. 22.78% in controls, p = ns). The frequency of -122T was higher in patients with ≥ 3 abortions as compared to controls (93.42% vs. 88.06%, p = ns), and -122C was observed more frequently in controls (6.58% vs. 11.94% in controls, p = ns). There were no significant differences as far as the -675 4G/5G polymorphism was concerned.

Conclusions: The obtained results suggest a possible protective role of Gln353 and -122C alleles in recurrent miscarriage.

Get Citation

Keywords

thrombophilia, pregnancy loss, gene polymorphism

About this article
Title

Correlation between factor VII and PAI-1 genetic variants and recurrent miscarriage

Journal

Ginekologia Polska

Issue

Vol 87, No 7 (2016)

Article type

Research paper

Pages

504-509

Published online

2016-07-29

Page views

1947

Article views/downloads

2810

DOI

10.5603/GP.2016.0034

Pubmed

27504943

Bibliographic record

Ginekol Pol 2016;87(7):504-509.

Keywords

thrombophilia
pregnancy loss
gene polymorphism

Authors

Magdalena Barlik
Agnieszka Seremak-Mrozikiewicz
Krzysztof Drews
Andrzej Klejewski
Grażyna Kurzawińska
Zdzisław Łowicki
Hubert Wolski

Regulations

Important: This website uses cookies. More >>

The cookies allow us to identify your computer and find out details about your last visit. They remembering whether you've visited the site before, so that you remain logged in - or to help us work out how many new website visitors we get each month. Most internet browsers accept cookies automatically, but you can change the settings of your browser to erase cookies or prevent automatic acceptance if you prefer.

By VM Media Group sp. z o.o., ul. Świętokrzyska 73, 80–180 Gdańsk
tel.:+48 58 320 94 94, faks:+48 58 320 94 60, e-mail:  viamedica@viamedica.pl