Excessive Subchorionic Fibrinoid Deposition as a Component of Massive Perivillous Fibrin Deposition: A Case With Maternal Immune Thrombocytopenia.
Mana TaweevisitPanachai NimitpanyaPaul Scott ThornerPublished in: Pediatric and developmental pathology : the official journal of the Society for Pediatric Pathology and the Paediatric Pathology Society (2022)
Maternal floor infarction (MFI) and massive perivillous fibrin deposition (MPFD) are overlapping placental disorders of unknown etiology, associated with adverse obstetric outcome, and a significant risk of recurrence. We describe a 31-year-old mother with asymptomatic thrombocytopenia throughout pregnancy and a positive lupus anticoagulant. She delivered a normal female neonate at term, whose weight was small for gestational age, with a placenta weighing less than the 10 th percentile. Placental examination showed MPFD together with excessive subchorionic fibrinoid deposition. The placenta showed diffuse C4d deposition and an immune-mediated reaction was postulated for the pathogenesis of the placental changes. We suggest that excessive subchorionic fibrinoid deposition may be part of the morphologic spectrum of MFI/MPFD.