Lack of Stem Cells: Key to Repeat Miscarriages?
"We have discovered that the lining of the womb in the recurrent miscarriage patients we studied is already defective before pregnancy," said research team leader Jan Brosens, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Warwick in England.
"I can envisage that we will be able to correct
these defects before the patient tries to achieve another pregnancy. In
fact, this may be the only way to really prevent miscarriages in these
cases," Brosens said in a university news release.
Between 15 percent and 25 percent of pregnancies end
in miscarriage. And one in 100 women trying to have children suffers
recurrent miscarriages, defined as the loss of three or more consecutive
pregnancies, the researchers noted.
Stem cells, meanwhile, have the potential to develop into many different cell types in the body, scientists say.
For the current study, the research team analyzed
uterine lining samples from 183 women. They found that those who
miscarried repeatedly had a lack of stem cells in the tissue.
The researchers noted that the lining has to renew itself after each menstrual cycle,
miscarriage and birth. This shortage likely accelerates aging of the
uterine lining, increasing the risk of miscarriage, they said.
"Cultured cells from women who had had three or more
consecutive miscarriages showed that aging cells in the lining of the
womb don't have the ability to prepare adequately for pregnancy," Brosens said.
The study was published March 7 in the journal Stem Cells.
"The real challenge now is to develop strategies to
increase the function of stem cells in the womb lining," study co-author
Siobhan Quenby, a professor of obstetrics, said in the news release.
"We will start piloting new interventions to improve the lining of the womb in the spring of 2016," she said.
The researchers' focus will be twofold, Quenby said.
First, they want to develop new tests of the uterine lining, or
endometrium, to improve the screening of women at risk of repeat
miscarriages.
"Second, there are a number of drugs and other
interventions, such as endometrial 'scratch,' a procedure used to help
embryos implant more successfully, that have the potential to increase
the stem cell populations in the womb lining," Quenby said.
- WebMD
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