City
Epaper

Clinical trial in pregnant women aims to detect foetal cardiac defects

By ANI | Updated: November 10, 2023 22:50 IST

California [US], November 10 : Some people have anti-Ro/SSA antibodies (anti-Sjogren's syndrome-related antigen antibodies). Many people with autoantibodies (also ...

Open in App

California [US], November 10 : Some people have anti-Ro/SSA antibodies (anti-Sjogren's syndrome-related antigen antibodies). Many people with autoantibodies (also known as anti-Ro antibodies) have autoimmune disorders such as lupus or Sjogren's syndrome, although many do not.

High levels of these antibodies in pregnant women were linked to foetal atrioventricular block (AVB), which occurs when inflammation and subsequent scarring prevent electric signals from the heart's atria from reaching the ventricles. The condition causes life-long pacing and can be deadly.

The study was published in Arthritis & Rheumatology, an official journal of the American College of Rheumatology, and is a peer-reviewed publication for scientists and clinicians interested in the natural history, pathophysiology, therapy, and outcome of rheumatic illnesses.

The magazine publishes high-quality fundamental and clinical research on rheumatic disorders, covering a broad range of topics of investigation.

The incidence of AVB increased with higher levels of anti-Ro/SSA antibodies in the Surveillance To Prevent AV Block Likely to Occur Quickly (STOP BLOQ) trial, reaching 7.7 per cent for those in the top quartile, which increased to 27.3 per cent in those with a previous child who had AVB, though participant numbers in that category were small.

The titers of antibodies did not alter over time. The trial also demonstrated that home-based foetal heart rate monitoring diagnosed conduction problems with high accuracy, potentially reducing the requirement for serial echocardiograms.

"Examining the levels of anti-Ro/SSA antibodies is an important advance since for women with low titers, monitoring is probably not necessary and for those with high titers, the increased risk supports surveillance," said corresponding author Jill Buyon, MD, of NYU Langone Health.

She added that this study also indicated that titers of antibodies do not change and that additional factors besides antibodies contribute to risk.

"That home monitoring can rapidly and accurately identify early foetal conduction disease is a major step forward that may significantly decrease the need for echocardiograms and hopefully facilitate reversibility," added senior author and research professor Bettina Cuneo MD, of the University of Arizona-Tucson College of Medicine.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"Steve and Jared will be heading to Pakistan tomorrow to hear Iranians out": White House

Cricket"Couldn't get as many runs as we would have liked": Gill after GT's defeat to RCB

International'Begun process to achieve peace between Israel, Lebanon': Netanyahu

NationalNew Niti Aayog team to have two leading experts hailing from Bengal; Ashok Lahiri as Vice Chairperson, Gobardhan Das as Member

Cricket"His innings was the difference": Kohli lauds Padikkal's knock after RCB's win over GT

Health Realted Stories

HealthScientists find where airborne microplastics really come from: Study

HealthSC orders SIT probe into UP's Ghaziabad child rape-murder case

HealthIndia’s bio-economy projected to touch $1 trillion by 2047: Minister

HealthCan Fit and Healthy People Still Get Heart Attacks? Experts Explain Hidden Risks

HealthSuccessful 2nd Annual Conference on “Diabetes in Pregnancy and Beyond” in Pune