Subtypes of Preeclampsia: Recognition and Determining Clinical Usefulness

Author:

Roberts James M.1ORCID,Rich-Edwards Janet W.23ORCID,McElrath Thomas F.4,Garmire Lana5,Myatt Leslie6,

Affiliation:

1. Magee-Womens Research Institute, Department of Obstetrics Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, Epidemiology and Clinical and Translational Research, University of Pittsburgh (J.M.R.).

2. Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University, Boston, MA (J.W.R.-E.).

3. Division of Women’s Health, Department of Medicine (J.W.R.-E.), Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.

4. Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine (T.F.M.), Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.

5. Department of Computational Medicine and Bioinformatics, Medical School, University of Michigan (L.G.).

6. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Moore Institute of Nutrition and Wellness, Oregon Health and Science University (L.M.).

Abstract

The concept that preeclampsia is a multisystemic syndrome is appreciated in both research and clinical care. Our understanding of pathophysiology recognizes the role of inflammation, oxidative and endoplasm reticulum stress, and angiogenic dysfunction. Yet, we have not progressed greatly toward clinically useful prediction nor had substantial success in prevention or treatment. One possibility is that the maternal syndrome may be reached through different pathophysiological pathways, that is, subtypes of preeclampsia, that in their specificity yield more clinical utility. For example, early and late onset preeclampsia are increasingly acknowledged as different pathophysiological processes leading to a common presentation. Other subtypes of preeclampsia are supported by disparate clinical outcomes, long-range prognosis, organ systems involved, and risk factors. These insights have been supplemented by discovery-driven methods, which cluster preeclampsia cases into groups indicating different pathophysiologies. In this presentation, we review likely subtypes based on current knowledge and suggest others. We present a consideration of the requirements for a clinically meaningful preeclampsia subtype. A useful subtype should (1) identify a specific pathophysiological pathway or (2) specifically indicate maternal or fetal outcome, (3) be recognizable in a clinically useful time frame, and (4) these results should be reproducible and generalizable (but at varying frequency) including in low resource settings. We recommend that the default consideration be that preeclampsia includes several subtypes rather than trying to force all cases into a single pathophysiological pathway. The recognition of subtypes and deciphering their different pathophysiologies will provide specific targets for prevention, prediction, and treatment directing personalized care.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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