Engelsk titel: Pre-eclampsia research in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study
Läs online
Författare:
Magnus, Per
;
Trogstad, Lill
Email: per.magnus@fhi.no
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 30
Dokumenttyp:
Översikt
UI-nummer: 15043676
Sammanfattning
Pre-eclampsia is a pregnancy disorder of unknown origin. In Norway, pre-eclampsia is reported
in 3 to 4 per cent of registered births. At present, November 2014, a series of investigations into the
etiology of preeclampsia have been published internationally from the Norwegian Mother and Child
Cohort Study (MoBa), and several studies are ongoing. The intention of this paper is to give a short
summary of what has been accomplished, and to discuss future avenues of research concerning
causes, mechanisms and consequences of pre-eclampsia. The papers that have been published up
to now include seven that concern life-styles (physical activity, tobacco and diet), six that include
prior pregnancies, infection, gestational weight gain, toxicants and tryptophan metabolism, and two
studies concerning issues of selection and validity. Major findings are that tobacco smoking is only
associated with reduced risk of pre-eclampsia when it occurs in the last trimester; that processed
food and sugar-sweetened beverages are associated with increased risk while vegetables, vitamin D
and probiotics are associated with reduced risk; and that prior induced abortions have the same risk-
reducing effect as a prior pregnancy. For future studies, we suggest that better use should be made
of the family structure built into MoBa. This includes better use of the discordant pregnancy design. A
series of ongoing genetic studies, partly in international consortia, will hopefully open new etiological
insights. The indications that pre-eclampsia is related to cardiovascular disease and other complex
disorders should be further investigated through systematic follow-up of pre-eclamptic women and
controls. Finally, MoBa is eminently suited to study the influences that pre-eclampsia can have on
the growing child.