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Walid Zammiti, Nabil Mtiraoui, Eric Mercier, Nesrine Abboud, Sarra Saidi, Touhami Mahjoub, Wassim Y. Almawi, Jean-Christophe Gris

Association of factor V gene polymorphisms (Leiden; Cambridge; Hong Kong and HR2 haplotype) with recurrent idiopathic pregnancy loss in Tunisia. A case-control study

Keywords: Pregnancy loss, Factor V Leiden mutation, Factor V HR2 haplotype

Inherited thrombophilia has been shown to be linked with fetal loss. We performed a case-control study on the association between thrombosis-related polymorphisms in the factor V (FV) gene (Leiden, Cambridge, Hong Kong; HR2 haplotype) and idiopathic recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) inTunisian women. A total of 348 women with RPL, and 203 control women were studied, corresponding to 1,250 pregnancy losses and 1,200 successful pregnancies. FV Leiden was seen in 19.4% of patients (4.3% in the homozygous state) and in 5.5% of controls. The prevalence of the FV HR2 haplotype was similar in patients and controls, but with 7 homozygous patients for 1 control. FV Cambridge and Hong Kong were absent from both patients and controls. The study of all pregnancy losses evidenced that the frequency of the factorV Leiden polymorphism was zero in women who had mis-carried before 7 weeks of gestation, and then sharply increased to a plateau. After categorization of pregnancy losses (before 8 weeks of gestation; weeks 8 and 9; weeks 10 to 12; from the 13th week of gestation onwards), heterozygous and homozygous factor V Leiden polymorphisms, and homozygous FV HR2 haplotype, were associated with significant and independent risks of pregnancy loss during weeks 8 and 9, which increased during weeks 10 to 12, then culminated after week 12. In Tunisian women with idiopathic RPL, factor V Leiden polymorphism and homozygous FV HR2 haplotype are not a risk factor for very early pregnancy loss, before 8 weeks of gestation, but are thereafter associated with significant clinical risks, which gradually increase from the 8th week onwards.

Thrombosis and Haemostasis, Schattauer

Print ISSN: 0340-6245
Volume: 95, 04/2006
Pages: 612 - 617

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