TY - JOUR
T1 - Early Pregnancy Losses
T2 - Review of Nomenclature, Histopathology, and Possible Etiologies
AU - Pinar, M. Halit
AU - Gibbins, Karen
AU - He, Mai
AU - Kostadinov, Stefan
AU - Silver, Robert
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, © 2018 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2018/5/4
Y1 - 2018/5/4
N2 - Miscarriage is a frequent complication of human pregnancy: ∼50% to 70% of spontaneous conceptions are lost prior to the second trimester. Etiology of miscarriage includes genetic abnormalities, infections, immunological and implantation disorders, uterine and endocrine abnormalities, and lifestyle factors. Given such variability, knowledge regarding causes, pathophysiological mechanisms, and morphologies of primary early pregnancy loss has significant gaps; often, pregnancy losses remain unexplained. Pathologic evaluation of miscarriage tissue is an untapped source of knowledge. Although miscarriage specimens comprise a significant part of pathologists' workload, information reported from these specimens is typically of minimal clinical utility for delineating etiology or predicting recurrence risk. Standardized terminology is available, though not universally used. We reintroduce the terminology and review new information about early pregnancy losses and their morphologies. Current clinical terminology is inconsistent, hampering research progress. This review is a resource for diagnostic pathologists studying this complex problem.
AB - Miscarriage is a frequent complication of human pregnancy: ∼50% to 70% of spontaneous conceptions are lost prior to the second trimester. Etiology of miscarriage includes genetic abnormalities, infections, immunological and implantation disorders, uterine and endocrine abnormalities, and lifestyle factors. Given such variability, knowledge regarding causes, pathophysiological mechanisms, and morphologies of primary early pregnancy loss has significant gaps; often, pregnancy losses remain unexplained. Pathologic evaluation of miscarriage tissue is an untapped source of knowledge. Although miscarriage specimens comprise a significant part of pathologists' workload, information reported from these specimens is typically of minimal clinical utility for delineating etiology or predicting recurrence risk. Standardized terminology is available, though not universally used. We reintroduce the terminology and review new information about early pregnancy losses and their morphologies. Current clinical terminology is inconsistent, hampering research progress. This review is a resource for diagnostic pathologists studying this complex problem.
KW - Early pregnancy loss
KW - histopathology
KW - miscarriage
KW - nomenclature
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U2 - 10.1080/15513815.2018.1455775
DO - 10.1080/15513815.2018.1455775
M3 - Review article
C2 - 29737906
AN - SCOPUS:85051662648
SN - 1551-3815
VL - 37
SP - 191
EP - 209
JO - Pediatric Pathology and Molecular Medicine
JF - Pediatric Pathology and Molecular Medicine
IS - 3
ER -