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Could molecular assessment of calcium metabolism be a useful tool to early screen patients at risk for pre-eclampsia complicated pregnancy? Proposal and rationale.

Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine
June 1, 2015
Salvatore Gizzo et al. (7 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Extracted Claims (5)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
calcium supplementation
neutral
-
women with low calcium intake
-
seems to give beneficial effects
#1
calcium supplementation
decrease
pre-eclampsia onset
-
-
may drastically reduce the percentage
#2
calcium supplementation
increase
neonatal outcome
-
-
consequently improving
#3
calcium supplementation
decrease
pre-eclampsia onset
patients with calcium metabolism disorders
-
may represent a dietary mean to reduce
#4
calcium supplementation
increase
pregnancy outcome
patients with calcium metabolism disorders
-
to improve
#5
Abstract

One of the most frequent causes of maternal and perinatal morbidity is represented by hypertensive disorders during pregnancy. Women at high risk must be subjected to a more intensive antenatal surveillance and prophylactic treatments. Many genetic risk factors, clinical features and biomarkers have been proposed but none of these seems able to prevent pre-eclampsia onset. English literature review of manuscripts focused on calcium intake and hypertensive disorders during pregnancy was performed. We performed a critical analysis of evidences about maternal calcium metabolism pattern in pregnancy analyzing all possible bias affecting studies. Calcium supplementation seems to give beneficial effects on women with low calcium intake. Some evidence reported that calcium supplementation may drastically reduce the percentage of pre-eclampsia onset consequently improving the neonatal outcome. Starting from this evidence, it is intuitive that investigations on maternal calcium metabolism pattern in first trimester of pregnancy could represent a low cost, large scale tool to screen pregnant women and to identify those at increased risk of pre-eclampsia onset. We propose a biochemical screening of maternal calcium metabolism pattern in first trimester of pregnancy to discriminate patients who potentially may benefit from calcium supplementation. In a second step we propose to randomly allocate the sub-cohort of patients with calcium metabolism disorders in a treatment group (calcium supplementation) or in a control group (placebo) to define if calcium supplementation may represent a dietary mean to reduce pre-eclampsia onset and to improve pregnancy outcome.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
CalciumEarly DiagnosisEvidence-Based MedicineFemaleHumansPre-EclampsiaPregnancyRisk
Study Links
Citation Metrics
Total Citations8
Citations/Year0.8
Relative Citation Ratio0.45
NIH Percentile24.6%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
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