Recurrent miscarriage—an aspirin a day?

Raj Rai, May Backos, Noel Baxter, Ian Chilcott and Lesley Regan1

Department of Reproductive Science and Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine at St Mary's, Mint Wing, Praed Street, London W2 1PG, UK


    Abstract
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Recurrent miscarriage and later pregnancy complications are in some cases associated with placental thrombosis and infarction. The aim of this study was to assess the value of low dose aspirin (75 mg daily) in improving the subsequent livebirth rate amongst women with either unexplained recurrent early miscarriage (<13 weeks gestation; n = 805) or unexplained late pregnancy loss (n = 250). Amongst women with recurrent early miscarriages, there was no significant difference in the livebirth rate between those who took aspirin (251/367; 68.4%) compared with those who did not take aspirin [278/438; 63.5%; odds ratio (OR) 1.24; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.93–1.67]. This relationship was independent of the number of previous early miscarriages. In contrast, women with a previous late miscarriage who took aspirin had a significantly higher livebirth rate (122/189; 64.6%) compared with those who did not take aspirin (30/61; 49.2%: OR 1.88; 95% CI 1.04–3.37). The empirical use of low dose aspirin amongst women with unexplained recurrent early miscarriage is not justified. We are currently investigating the role of incremental doses of aspirin in the treatment of women both with early miscarriages associated with thrombophilic abnormalities and in those with late pregnancy losses.

Key words: aspirin/recurrent miscarriage


    Introduction
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Pregnancy is a hypercoagulable state. Over the last decade evidence has accumulated to suggest that some cases of recurrent miscarriage and later pregnancy complications are due to an exaggerated haemostatic response during pregnancy leading to placental thrombosis and infarction. First, microthrombi are a common finding in the placental vasculature of women with recurrent miscarriage (Rushton, 1988Go); secondly, placental thrombosis has been described in association with individual thrombophilic defects (Rai et al., 1996Go; Dizon et al., 1997Go); and finally, there is an increased prevalence of both congenital and acquired thrombophilic defects amongst women with adverse pregnancy outcome at all gestational ages (Rai et al., 1995Go; Preston et al., 1996Go; Kupferminc et al., 1999Go).

Low dose aspirin is an anti-platelet agent which irreversibly inhibits platelet cyclo-oxgenase and thereby decreases the production of thromboxane A2 (TXA2), a potent vasoconstrictor. Aspirin has been widely used in attempts to treat pregnant women with recurrent miscarriage associated with antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL), an acquired thrombophilic defect, and other auto-immune conditions (Kutteh, 1996Go; Laskin et al., 1997Go; Rai et al., 1997Go). The aim of this study was to assess the value of low dose aspirin in improving the subsequent livebirth rate amongst women with either unexplained recurrent early miscarriage or unexplained late pregnancy loss.


    Materials and methods
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Subjects
An observational study of the prospective pregnancy outcome of 1055 women who had a history of either (i) three or more consecutive early miscarriages (<13 weeks gestation; n = 805) or (ii) at least one late miscarriage (>13 weeks gestation; n = 250) was performed (Table IGo). All women were investigated according to our protocol and no causes for their pregnancy losses were found (Clifford et al., 1994Go). In brief, all women had (i) a normal peripheral blood karyotype, as did their partner, (ii) normal uterine anatomy demonstrated on ultrasound and (iii) persistently negative tests for aPL (lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies). All women conceived spontaneously and only singleton pregnancies were studied.


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Table I. Demographic details of the 1055 women studied
 
Antiphospholipid assays
Women were screened prior to pregnancy for aPL on at least two occasions more than 6 weeks apart. Lupus anticoagulant (LA) was detected using the dilute Russell's viper venom time (dRVVT) together with a platelet neutralization procedure. Patient samples with a dRVVT ratio (test/control) of >=1.1 were re-tested with a platelet neutralization procedure. A decrease of 10% or more in the ratio was considered to be positive for LA (Lupus Anticoagulant Working Party on behalf of the BCSH Haemostasis and Thrombosis Taskforce, 1991Go). Anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL) were identified using a standardized enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). An immunoglobulin G (IgG) aCL >=5 GPL units and an immunoglobulin M (IgM) aCL level >=3 MPL units was considered to be positive (Khamashta and Hughes, 1993Go). Women with persistently positive tests for either LA or aCL were diagnosed as having the primary antiphospholipid syndrome and were treated with aspirin and heparin during pregnancy (Rai et al., 1997Go).

Management during pregnancy
Women were divided into two groups—those who chose to take low dose aspirin (75 mg daily) and those who did not take aspirin. Aspirin was started within 5 weeks of amenorrhoea and continued until delivery. Both groups of women took folic acid (400 µg daily) until 14 weeks gestation as prophylaxis against neural tube defects. No woman took heparin. All were encouraged to attend a dedicated early pregnancy clinic at which supportive care was offered and serial first trimester ultrasound scans were performed.

Our clinic is a national referral centre. Accordingly, the overwhelming majority of women that we see have been previously counselled by a variety of doctors—both general practitioners and gynaecologists. Many of these individuals recommend aspirin treatment on an empirical basis. One of the primary aims of this study was to provide data in order that clinicians may have some basis, or lack of basis, for recommending aspirin therapy during pregnancy.

Statistical analysis
Normally distributed continuous variables were analysed using Student's t test; otherwise the Mann Whitney U test was used. Discrete variables were analysed using the {chi}2 test.


    Results
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 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Women with unexplained recurrent early miscarriages had a good chance of a subsequent successful pregnancy (Table IIGo). There was no significant difference in the livebirth rate between those who took aspirin (251/367; 68.4%) compared with those who did not take aspirin [278/438; 63.5%; odds ratio (OR) 1.24; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.93–1.67]. This relationship was independent of the number of previous early miscarriages (Figure 1Go).


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Table II. Future pregnancy outcome of women with unexplained recurrent early miscarriage
 


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Figure 1. Prospective pregnancy outcome amongst women with unexplained recurrent early miscarriage. Values above each bar are the number of patients in each group.

 
In contrast, women with a previous late miscarriage who took aspirin had a significantly higher livebirth rate (122/189; 64.6%) compared with those who did not take aspirin (30/61; 49.2%: OR 1.88; 95% CI 1.04–3.37)(Table IIIGo). There was no significant difference in either the gestational age at delivery or the birthweight between those taking aspirin and those not taking aspirin (Tables II and IIIGoGo). No baby had a congenital abnormality. The median gestational age of miscarriage amongst women with a previous late miscarriage who took aspirin was 14.6 weeks (range 5.2–22.8) compared with 8.9 weeks (range 5.6–18.4) amongst those who did not take aspirin (P < 0.001).


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Table III. Future pregnancy outcome of women with unexplained late miscarriage
 
Amongst women with recurrent early miscarriage, karyotypic analysis of the products of conception was successfully undertaken in 34 women taking aspirin who miscarried (34/116; 29%) and 61 women not taking aspirin who miscarried (61/160; 38%: not significantly different). There was no significant difference in the incidence of karyotypically abnormal pregnancies between those taking aspirin (15/34; 44%) and those not taking aspirin (22/61; 36%).


    Discussion
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Low dose aspirin significantly improves the livebirth rate amongst women with a previous late miscarriage. It is, however, of no benefit to those women with unexplained recurrent early miscarriages.

Aspirin inhibits the action of the enzyme cyclo-oxygenase and thereby suppresses the production of TXA2 in platelets. In vascular cell walls, cyclo-oxygenase is also responsible for the conversion of arachidonic acid to prostacyclin (PGI2). TXA2 induces platelet aggregation and vasoconstriction, whilst PGI2 inhibits platelet aggregation and induces vasodilation. Women with a history of recurrent early miscarriage in weeks 4–7 of gestation have an excess of TXA2 production and between weeks 8–11 they are relatively PGI2 deficient, compared with women with no previous history of pregnancy loss (Tulpalla et al., 1991Go). These changes are greatest amongst those whose pregnancies end in miscarriage. The shift in the TXA2:PGI2 ratio, in favour of TXA2, may lead to vasospasm and platelet aggregation in the trophoblast, causing the development of microthrombi and placental necrosis. In a small study of women with early miscarriages it was reported that whilst aspirin corrects these biochemical abnormalities, it does not affect the miscarriage rate (Tulppala et al., 1997Go).

There are several possible reasons for the lack of efficacy of low dose aspirin in improving the pregnancy outcome of women with recurrent early miscarriages. First, a proportion of women with recurrent early miscarriages have lost three consecutive pregnancies purely by chance alone and have no underlying pathological abnormality; second, aspirin may truly have no effect; third, the dose of aspirin may be too low; and finally aspirin may only be of benefit to a subgroup of women with recurrent early miscarriage associated with a thrombophilic defect. Indeed, randomized controlled studies have only shown aspirin to be of benefit to women with aPL, which are an acquired thrombophilic defect (Kutteh, 1996Go; Rai et al., 1997Go).

In this study, women took a low dose of aspirin (75 mg daily). This dose of aspirin, or an even lower dose of 60 mg daily, has often been used in pregnancy studies examining the effect of aspirin on the incidence of pre-eclampsia (CLASP Collaborative Group, 1994; Sibai, 1998Go). This dose derives from studies examining the effect of aspirin on myocardial re-infarction rates. In these cardiovascular studies, lower doses of aspirin (60–150 mg/day) were found to be as effective as higher doses (up to 1000 mg/day) with fewer side-effects (Antiplatelet Trialists' Collaboration, 1994aGo). This may not be the case in pregnancy, and indeed the mechanisms underlying the cardio-protective effects of aspirin may not be applicable to pregnancy.

In contrast to its lack of efficacy amongst women with unexplained recurrent early miscarriage, low dose aspirin significantly increased the prospective livebirth rate amongst women with a previous late miscarriage. This supports the hypothesis that a number of cases of second trimester miscarriage and later pregnancy complications have a thrombotic aetiology.

An important finding, which demands further investigation, was the significantly higher number of late miscarriages amongst women who took aspirin compared with those who did not. An explanation for this may lie in our understanding of the development of placental intervillous blood flow. Clearly, in order for maternal thrombophilic defects to cause placental thrombosis and subsequent pregnancy loss, there must be a maternal intervillous circulation. Recent histological data suggest that this only develops after 8 weeks gestation (Burton et al., 1999Go). Amongst women who had a further late miscarriage, aspirin at a dose of 75 mg daily may be sufficient to maintain the pregnancies until after 14 weeks gestation, but insufficient to maintain them to the stage of viability. It is possible that higher doses of aspirin may lead to a higher livebirth rate. Whilst no study has examined the effect of variable dose aspirin in the treatment of women with recurrent miscarriage, a study on aspirin and pre-eclampsia reported excellent livebirth rates amongst those in whom the dose of aspirin was titrated during pregnancy against the mean platelet volume (Sullivan et al., 1998Go).

There is now convincing evidence that many cases of recurrent miscarriage and later pregnancy complications have a thrombotic aetiology. Whilst the empirical use of low dose aspirin in women with unexplained recurrent early miscarriage cannot be justified, we are currently investigating the role of higher doses of aspirin in the treatment of both women with early miscarriages associated with thrombophilic abnormalities and in those with late pregnancy losses.


    Notes
 
1 To whom correspondence should be addressed at: Department of Reproductive Science and Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine at St Mary's, Mint Wing, Praed Street, London W2 1PG, UK. E-mail: l.regan{at}ic.ac.uk Back


    References
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 Abstract
 Introduction
 Materials and methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
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Submitted on March 21, 2000; accepted on June 30, 2000.