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Placenta specific protein-1 in recurrent pregnancy loss and in In Vitro Fertilisation failure: a prospective observational case-control study.

Nafiye YilmazHakan TimurEvin Nil UgurluSaynur YilmazA Seval Ozgu-ErdıncSelcuk ErkilincHasan Ali Inal
Published in: Journal of obstetrics and gynaecology : the journal of the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (2019)
Observations from studies have provided evidence that Placenta-specific protein1 (PLAC1) is important for the establishment and maintenance of pregnancy and suggest it as a potential biomarker for gestational pathologies. The aim of this study is to investigate whether maternal serum PLAC1 levels have any impact on etiopathogenesis of recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) and repeated implantation failure after In Vitro Fertilisation (RIF). We conducted a prospective observational case-control study in a Research Hospital. Twenty-eight patients with RPL (group 1), 30 patients with unexplained infertility and RIF (group 2), 29 fertile patients (group 3) were included. The demographic features and serum PLAC1 levels were compared. There was a significant difference in PLAC1 levels between the groups (group 1 = 19.71 + 16.55 ng/ml; group 2 = 4.82 + 1.44 ng/ml; group 3 = 0.89 + 0.62 ng/ml, respectively) (p=.001). Positive correlation was found between serum PLAC1 levels and abortion rates (r = 0.64; p=.001), a negative correlation was found between serum PLAC1 levels and live birth rates (r = -0.69; p=.001). PLAC1 might have a negative effect on implantation in RPL and RIF. There may be a subgroup of PLAC with different bioactivity. There are no relevant studies conducted among these populations, further large-scale studies are needed to assess the molecular role of PLAC1 on implantation.IMPACT STATEMENTWhat is already known about this subject? PLAC1 (placenta-specific protein-1) gene is located on the X chromosome which encodes for a protein that is thought to be important for placental development although its role has not been clearly defined. Studies in the literature have provided evidence that PLAC1 has an important role in the establishment and maintenance of pregnancy and suggest it as a potential biomarker for gestational pathologies. Several reports over the past few years have demonstrated PLAC1 expression in a variety of human tumours including lung cancers, breast cancer, hepatocellular and colorectal cancers, gastric cancers and uterine cancers.What do the results of this study add? There have been no previous studies conducted among patients with recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) or repeated implantation failure after In Vitro Fertilisation (RIF) that have searched for any association between PLAC1 levels and implantation failure. This study has demonstrated higher PLAC1 levels in infertile women with RIF and RPL for the first time; suggesting that it could have a negative effect on implantation in these populations. PLAC1 could be detected in the serum as a biomarker that is associated with RIF and RPL. What are the implications of these findings for clinical practice and/or further research? Defining the precise role of PLAC1 during implantation will provide new insight into understanding of poor reproductive outcomes such as RIF and RPL and help in developing treatment strategies. Further large-scale studies with more patients are needed to uncover the clinical value of PLAC1 as a biomarker to predict repeated implantation failure and RPL.
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