Abstract

It has been suggested that patients with clinical features suggestive of antiphospholipid syndrome but being lupus anticoagulant (LA) and anticardiolipin (aCL) negative, should be tested for antibodies to beta(2) glycoprotein-I (abeta(2)GP-I), a protein involved in the binding of antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) to phospholipid surfaces. This was investigated in the present study where a total of 385 women aged </=40 years were included. Of these, 175 were experimental subjects and 210 were controls. The former comprised the following two study groups: 100 spontaneous recurrent aborters (group one), and 75 patients with repeated failure of embryo transfer (group two). Controls included three groups of women: 100 normal healthy parous women with no previous abortion (group three), 60 infertile patients achieving a live birth with their first in-vitro fertilization (IVF)/embryo transfer attempt (group four), and 50 patients with recurrent abortion who tested positive for aPL (LA and/or aCL) (positive controls, group five). Only one patient among recurrent aborters (group one) tested positive for abeta(2)GP-I. All women in groups two, three and four were negative for abeta(2)GP-I screening. As expected, prevalence of patients testing positive for abeta(2)GP-I was significantly higher in group five than among the other groups of patients (P < 0.001). No differences were observed regarding the prevalence of abeta(2)GP-I positive sera in the subgroup of patients having aCL and those having the LA in group five. It is concluded that abeta(2)GP-I screening in first-trimester recurrent abortion or in failure of implantation after IVF is not warranted in patients without aPL as detected by standard antiphospholipid assays.

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