[The concentration of the pregnancy-associated plasma protein A (PAPP-A) in pregnant women smoking tobacco--preliminary study].

2007 
An improvement in prenatal screening for chromosomal defects in the first trimester of pregnancy has been achieved by combining sonography and biochemical markers. Among these markers exist the metalloproteinase pregnancy-associated plasma protein-A (PAPP-A) which promotes cell growth by proteolytic cleavage of insulin-like growth factor binding proteins (IGFBPs) causing the release of IGFs. The reduced level of PAPP-A in smokers in first-trimester has been reported previously. However, smoking influence on maternal level of PAPP-A during pregnancy has not been completely determined. The aim of this preliminary study was the investigation of PAPP-A concentrations in smoking women in the first- and third-trimester of pregnancy. The study comprised 40 pregnant women: 20 nonsmokers and 20 cigarette smokers. Only normal singleton pregnancies were included. Maternal serum levels of PAPP-A were measured with the KRYPTOR rapid random-access immunoassay analyser (Brahms GmbH, Germany) using time-resolved amplified cryptate emission technology (TRACE). In first-trimester of pregnancy we observed the lower of PAPP-A median values in smokers (2.77 IU/L, range 1.12-9.28 IU/L) by 24% than in nonsmokers (3.64 IU/L, range 1.68-6.79 IU/L). Next, we indicated that in third-trimester of pregnancy the PAPP-A median values were lower in smokers (48.45 IU/L, range 15.18-176.2 IU/L) until by 50% in comparison to the controls (96.56 IU/L, range 25.59-164.0 IU/L). Further studies will be continued to assessment the influence of some components from tobacco smoke on maternal serum PAPP-A in all trimesters of pregnancy.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []