Placental Vascular Abnormalities in Association With Prenatal and Long-Term Health Characteristics Among HIV-Exposed Uninfected Adolescents and Young Adults

HIV暴露但未感染的青少年和青年胎盘血管异常与产前和长期健康特征的关系

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: HIV-exposed uninfected (HEU) individuals are predisposed to adverse health outcomes, which in part may stem from the influence of an altered intrauterine milieu on fetal programming. The placenta serves as a readout for the effects of the maternal environment on the developing fetus and may itself contribute to the pathogenesis of disease. SETTING: US academic health system. METHODS: We leveraged a previously established registry-based cohort of HEU adolescents and young adults to identify 26 subjects for whom placental histopathology was available. We further obtained placental tissue from 29 HIV-unexposed pregnancies for comparison. We examined differences in placental histopathology between the groups and related villous vascularity in the HEU group to prenatal maternal characteristics and long-term health outcomes. RESULTS: Placentas from HEU pregnancies demonstrated a higher blood vessel count per villus as compared with controls (5.9 ± 1.0 vs. 5.4 ± 0.8; P = 0.05), which was independent of maternal prenatal age, race, body mass index, smoking status, hemoglobin, and gestational age. Furthermore, within the HEU group, lower CD4+ T-cell count during pregnancy was associated with greater placental vascularity (r = -0.44; P = 0.03). No significant relationships were observed between placental blood vessel count per villus and body mass index z-score or reactive airway disease among HEU individuals later in life. CONCLUSIONS: Placentas from HEU pregnancies demonstrated increased villous vascularity compared with HIV-unexposed controls in proportion to the severity of maternal immune dysfunction. Further studies are needed to examine intrauterine exposure to hypoxia as a potential mechanism of fetal programming in HIV.

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