OBJECTIVEWe have already reported that A1C is elevated because of iron deficiency in late pregnancy among nondiabetic pregnant women. This report examined whether the same phenomenon is observed in pregnant women with diabetes.RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSThis longitudinal study was conducted in 17 pregnant women with diabetes (20–35 weeks of pregnancy). A1C, serum glycated albumin, erythrocyte indexes, and iron metabolism indexes were measured.RESULTSA1C levels were significantly increased in late pregnancy, whereas serum glycated albumin showed no significant changes. Glycated albumin/A1C ratio, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, serum transferrin saturation, and serum ferritin were significantly decreased in late pregnancy. Serum transferrin saturation showed a significant positive correlation with glycated albumin/A1C ratio.CONCLUSIONSA1C levels, but not serum glycated albumin levels, are elevated in late pregnancy because of iron deficiency in diabetic women. Serum glycated albumin may offer an adequate marker for glycemic control during pregnancy.
Once established, complete congenital heart block was irreversible and maternal corticosteroid therapy did not effectively prevent cutaneous lupus erythematosus. However, prenatal maintenance therapy with prednisolone or betamethasone given to the mother starting early in pregnancy (before 16 weeks' gestation) might reduce the risk of developing antibody-mediated congenital heart block in the offspring.
Recent findings have raised the possibility that polymorphisms within the annexin A5 gene (ANXA5) promoter contribute to the etiology of recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL). In our present study, 243 Japanese women who had suffered more than three fetal losses and a group of 119 fertile controls were genotyped for four ANXA5 gene promoter single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs; SNP1-4: g.-467G >A, g.-448A>C, g.-422T>C, g.-373G>A) previously reported to be associated with this disorder. An additional two SNPs located within the 5'-untranslated region of the ANXA5 (SNP5 and 6: g.-302T>G, g.-1C>T) were also evaluated. Our case--control study revealed that the minor allele was significantly more frequent in the RPL group than controls for all six of these SNPs, among which SNP5 showed the highest significance (P= 0.002). As with the M2 haplotype for SNP1-4 (A-C-C-A) for a western population in previous reports, a haplotype comprising all of the minor alleles for SNP1-6 (A-C-C-A-G-T), the third major haplotype in the Japanese population, showed a significantly higher frequency in our current RPL subjects than in controls (P= 0.025). In addition, the second major haplotype (G-A-T-G-G-C) was found to confer a significant risk of RPL (P= 0.036), implicating SNP5 as a major risk determinant for this disease. Our present findings support the hypothesis that genomic variations within the ANXA5 gene upstream region impact upon the disease susceptibility to RPL. Our data indicate that SNP5 is a novel risk factor for this disease in the Japanese population.
Information concerning the prognosis of subsequent pregnancies in patients with reciprocal translocations is limited. This study was performed to determine the percentage success rate with first pregnancies after ascertainment of a carrier status. A total of 2,382 couples with a history of two or more consecutive miscarriages were studied in multicenters. The prevalence of an abnormal chromosome in either partner was examined, and subsequent success rates were compared between cases with and without an abnormal karyotype in either partner. A total of 129 couples (5.4%) had an abnormal karyotype in one partner excluding inversion 9 in 44 men and in 85 women. Thus, 2,253 couples had a normal karyotype in both partner. Eighty-five (3.6%) had translocations, 13 being Robertsonian translocations. Twenty-nine of the 46 cases (63.0%) who became pregnant with reciprocal translocations in either partner experienced a live birth with natural conception. In contrast, 950 of 1,207 cases (78.7%) with normal chromosomes had successful live births, the difference being significant (P = 0.019). No infant with an unbalanced translocation was found in 29 cases of successful pregnancy following recurrent miscarriage. Pregnancy prognosis was worsened with either maternal or paternal reciprocal translocations. Explanation of the success rate with natural conception should be provided before the subsequent pregnancy after ascertainment of carrier status.
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