Secondary recurrent miscarriage and H-Y immunity

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Secondary recurrent miscarriage and H-Y immunity. / Nielsen, Henriette Svarre.

In: Human Reproduction Update, Vol. 17, No. 4, 11.04.2011, p. 558-74.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nielsen, HS 2011, 'Secondary recurrent miscarriage and H-Y immunity', Human Reproduction Update, vol. 17, no. 4, pp. 558-74. https://doi.org/10.1093/humupd/dmr005

APA

Nielsen, H. S. (2011). Secondary recurrent miscarriage and H-Y immunity. Human Reproduction Update, 17(4), 558-74. https://doi.org/10.1093/humupd/dmr005

Vancouver

Nielsen HS. Secondary recurrent miscarriage and H-Y immunity. Human Reproduction Update. 2011 Apr 11;17(4):558-74. https://doi.org/10.1093/humupd/dmr005

Author

Nielsen, Henriette Svarre. / Secondary recurrent miscarriage and H-Y immunity. In: Human Reproduction Update. 2011 ; Vol. 17, No. 4. pp. 558-74.

Bibtex

@article{21d36e44b1f04a03b7ab0a4a3ff417a9,
title = "Secondary recurrent miscarriage and H-Y immunity",
abstract = "BACKGROUND Approximately half recurrent miscarriage (RM) cases remain unexplained after standard investigations. Secondary RM (SRM) is, in contrast to primary RM, preceded by a birth, which increases the transfer of fetal cells into the maternal circulation. Mothers of boys are often immunized against male-specific minor histocompatibility (H-Y) antigens, and H-Y immunity can cause graft-versus-host disease after stem-cell transplantation. We proposed the H-Y hypothesis that aberrant H-Y immunity is a causal factor for SRM. METHODS This is a critical review of the H-Y hypothesis based on own publications and papers identified by systematic PubMed and EMBASE searches. RESULTS SRM is more common after the birth of a boy and the subsequent live birth rate is reduced for SRM patients with a firstborn boy. The male:female ratio of children born prior and subsequent to SRM is 1.49 and 0.76 respectively. Maternal carriage of HLA-class II alleles presenting H-Y antigens to immune cells is associated with a reduced live birth rate and increased risk of obstetric complications in surviving pregnancies in SRM patients with a firstborn boy. In early pregnancy, both antibodies against HLA and H-Y antigens are increased in SRM patients compared with controls. Presence of these antibodies in early pregnancy is associated with a lower live birth rate and a low male:female ratio in subsequent live births, respectively. Births of boys are also associated with subsequent obstetric complications in the background population. CONCLUSIONS Epidemiological, immunogenetic and immunological studies support the hypothesis that aberrant maternal H-Y immune responses have a pathogenic role in SRM.",
author = "Nielsen, {Henriette Svarre}",
year = "2011",
month = apr,
day = "11",
doi = "10.1093/humupd/dmr005",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "558--74",
journal = "Human Reproduction Update",
issn = "1355-4786",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Secondary recurrent miscarriage and H-Y immunity

AU - Nielsen, Henriette Svarre

PY - 2011/4/11

Y1 - 2011/4/11

N2 - BACKGROUND Approximately half recurrent miscarriage (RM) cases remain unexplained after standard investigations. Secondary RM (SRM) is, in contrast to primary RM, preceded by a birth, which increases the transfer of fetal cells into the maternal circulation. Mothers of boys are often immunized against male-specific minor histocompatibility (H-Y) antigens, and H-Y immunity can cause graft-versus-host disease after stem-cell transplantation. We proposed the H-Y hypothesis that aberrant H-Y immunity is a causal factor for SRM. METHODS This is a critical review of the H-Y hypothesis based on own publications and papers identified by systematic PubMed and EMBASE searches. RESULTS SRM is more common after the birth of a boy and the subsequent live birth rate is reduced for SRM patients with a firstborn boy. The male:female ratio of children born prior and subsequent to SRM is 1.49 and 0.76 respectively. Maternal carriage of HLA-class II alleles presenting H-Y antigens to immune cells is associated with a reduced live birth rate and increased risk of obstetric complications in surviving pregnancies in SRM patients with a firstborn boy. In early pregnancy, both antibodies against HLA and H-Y antigens are increased in SRM patients compared with controls. Presence of these antibodies in early pregnancy is associated with a lower live birth rate and a low male:female ratio in subsequent live births, respectively. Births of boys are also associated with subsequent obstetric complications in the background population. CONCLUSIONS Epidemiological, immunogenetic and immunological studies support the hypothesis that aberrant maternal H-Y immune responses have a pathogenic role in SRM.

AB - BACKGROUND Approximately half recurrent miscarriage (RM) cases remain unexplained after standard investigations. Secondary RM (SRM) is, in contrast to primary RM, preceded by a birth, which increases the transfer of fetal cells into the maternal circulation. Mothers of boys are often immunized against male-specific minor histocompatibility (H-Y) antigens, and H-Y immunity can cause graft-versus-host disease after stem-cell transplantation. We proposed the H-Y hypothesis that aberrant H-Y immunity is a causal factor for SRM. METHODS This is a critical review of the H-Y hypothesis based on own publications and papers identified by systematic PubMed and EMBASE searches. RESULTS SRM is more common after the birth of a boy and the subsequent live birth rate is reduced for SRM patients with a firstborn boy. The male:female ratio of children born prior and subsequent to SRM is 1.49 and 0.76 respectively. Maternal carriage of HLA-class II alleles presenting H-Y antigens to immune cells is associated with a reduced live birth rate and increased risk of obstetric complications in surviving pregnancies in SRM patients with a firstborn boy. In early pregnancy, both antibodies against HLA and H-Y antigens are increased in SRM patients compared with controls. Presence of these antibodies in early pregnancy is associated with a lower live birth rate and a low male:female ratio in subsequent live births, respectively. Births of boys are also associated with subsequent obstetric complications in the background population. CONCLUSIONS Epidemiological, immunogenetic and immunological studies support the hypothesis that aberrant maternal H-Y immune responses have a pathogenic role in SRM.

U2 - 10.1093/humupd/dmr005

DO - 10.1093/humupd/dmr005

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 21482560

VL - 17

SP - 558

EP - 574

JO - Human Reproduction Update

JF - Human Reproduction Update

SN - 1355-4786

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 34164532