BACKGROUND:
Preeclampsia is a major cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality worldwide. Identifying women with high risk of developing preeclampsia in early pregnancy remains challenging. Extracellular vesicles released from the placenta offer an attractive biomarker but have been elusive to quantify.
METHODS:
Here, we tested ExoCounter, a novel device that immunophenotypes size-selected small extracellular vesicles <160 nm, for its ability to perform qualitative and quantitative placental small extracellular vesicles (psEV) analysis. To investigate disease-specific and gestational age-specific changes, we analyzed psEV counts in maternal plasma samples taken at each of the 3 trimesters from women who had (1) normal pregnancy (n=3); (2) women who developed early-onset preeclampsia ([EOPE], n=3); and (3) women who developed late-onset preeclampsia (n=4) using 3 antibody pairs, CD10-placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP), CD10-CD63, and CD63-PLAP. We further validated the findings in first-trimester serum samples among normal pregnancy (n=9), women who developed EOPE (n=7), and women who developed late-onset preeclampsia (n=8).
RESULTS:
We confirmed that CD63 was the major tetraspanin molecule coexpressed with PLAP—a known placental extracellular vesicles marker on psEV. Higher psEV counts for all 3 antibody pairs were detected in the plasma of women who developed EOPE than the other 2 groups in the first trimester, which persisted through the second and third trimesters. Significantly higher CD10-PLAP (
P
<0.01) and CD63-PLAP (
P
<0.01) psEV counts were validated in the serum of the first trimester of women who developed EOPE compared with normal pregnancy.
CONCLUSIONS:
Application of the ExoCounter assay developed here could identify patients at risk of developing EOPE in the first trimester, thereby providing a window of opportunity for early intervention.
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