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Researchers Say Proteins Can Indicate Uterine Infection
CNN and AP, July 27, 2004
CHICAGO (AP) -- Scientists have taken a big step toward developing an earlier,
safer and simple test that could help prevent perhaps 175,000 premature births
in the United States each year.
Researchers say they have identified certain proteins in the blood that can
indicate whether a pregnant woman has a uterine infection that can lead to
premature birth. They hope the discovery will lead to development of a
diagnostic blood test that would allow doctors to treat infected women with
antibiotics earlier, in time to prevent premature delivery.
"This is potentially very important," said Dr. Robert Goldenberg, an
obstetrics/gynecology professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham who
was not involved in the study.
Other doctors noted that the study involved only 33 women, and said further
research is needed to confirm that the proteins are, in fact, a universal
indicator of the infections.
Uterine infections typically arise from overgrowth of bacteria that normally
live in the vagina. They frequently cause no symptoms in the mother until she
goes into labor prematurely.
An invasive and sometimes risky test called amniocentesis -- which involves
inserting a long needle through the abdominal wall to draw out fluid -- can
confirm the infection during labor, but treatment with antibiotics at that point
is typically too late to prevent premature delivery.
Scientists said they hope further study will show whether earlier antibiotics
can, in fact, help prevent premature labor.
"It would be a great thing if that's the case, because preterm labor is such a
difficult thing to deal with right now," said Dr. Glenn Markenson, a
maternal-fetal medicine specialist at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield,
Mass. He was not involved in the study.
The study appears in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.
Cause for at least half of premature births, Uterine infections are believed to
cause at least half of the estimated 350,000 U.S. births that occur before
around 30 weeks' gestation each year. Such infants run the risk of serious and
sometimes fatal health problems, including blindness and brain disorders.
"My hope is that we have laid the foundation for detecting reliable diagnostic
markers of intrauterine infection in blood, without the need for an invasive
amniocentesis," said lead author Dr. Michael Gravett of Oregon Health & Science
University.
The study was funded in part by ProteoGenix Inc., a biotechnology company whose
founders include the Oregon university and some of the researchers. Gravett and
a co-author have a significant financial interest in the company.
The scientists combined monkey and human studies with an evolving science called
proteomics, or the study of proteins in living cells. Within 12 hours of
injecting pregnant laboratory monkeys with infection-causing germs, the
researchers identified specific biological markers signaling infection.
The markers also were found in all 11 pregnant women who were in premature labor
with symptomless amniotic-fluid infections and whose babies were born shortly
thereafter, prematurely. But the markers were not found in any of 11 other women
in premature labor who were not infected and whose babies were born near term.
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