Paternal and maternal components of the predisposition to preeclampsia.

Citation
Ms. Esplin et al., Paternal and maternal components of the predisposition to preeclampsia., N ENG J MED, 344(12), 2001, pp. 867-872
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
General & Internal Medicine","Medical Research General Topics
Journal title
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
ISSN journal
00284793 → ACNP
Volume
344
Issue
12
Year of publication
2001
Pages
867 - 872
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-4793(20010322)344:12<867:PAMCOT>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
Background: There is an inherited maternal predisposition to preeclampsia. Whether there is a paternal component, however, is not known. Methods: We used records of the Utah Population Database to identify 298 me n and 237 women born in Utah between 1947 and 1957 whose mothers had had pr eeclampsia during their pregnancy. For each man and woman in the study grou p, we identified two matched, unrelated control subjects who were not the p roducts of pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia. We then identified 947 children of the 298 male study subjects and 830 children of the 237 female study subjects who had been born between 1970 and 1992. These children were matched to offspring of the control subjects (1973 offspring of the male c ontrol group and 1658 offspring of the female control group). Factors assoc iated with preeclampsia were identified, and odds ratios were calculated wi th the use of stepwise logistic-regression analysis. Results: In the group of men whose mothers had had preeclampsia (the male s tudy group), 2.7 percent of the offspring (26 of 947) were born of pregnanc ies complicated by preeclampsia, as compared with 1.3 percent of the offspr ing (26 of 1973) in the male control group. In the female study group, 4.7 percent of the pregnancies (39 of 830) were complicated by preeclampsia, as compared with 1.9 percent (32 of 1658) in the female control group. After adjustment for the offspring's year of birth, maternal parity, and the offs pring's gestational age at delivery, the odds ratio for an adult whose moth er had had preeclampsia having a child who was the product of a pregnancy c omplicated by preeclampsia was 2.1 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.0 to 4.3; P=0.04) in the male study group and 3.3 (95 percent confidence interva l, 1.5 to 7.5; P=0.004) in the female study group. Conclusions: Both men and women who were the product of a pregnancy complic ated by preeclampsia were significantly more likely than control men and wo men to have a child who was the product of a pregnancy complicated by preec lampsia. (N Engl J Med 2001;344:867-72.) Copyright (C) 2001 Massachusetts M edical Society.