13 research outputs found
Pregnancy after Endometriosis: Maternal and Neonatal Outcomes according to the Location of the Disease.
Objective: To systematically evaluate pregnancy and labor course, obstetrical complications, and maternal and neonatal outcomes in women with endometriosis, stratifying according to the specific location of the disease. Study Design: We retrospectively analyzed our prospectively maintained obstetrical database from January 2011 to August 2014 to identify all women with a previous histological diagnosis of endometriosis who delivered at our institution (cases). We divided the cases according to the specific location of the disease (deep infiltrating endometriosis, ovarian endometriosis, and peritoneal endometriosis). As controls, we identified all unaffected women who delivered in the year 2013. To avoid the confounding effect of parity, we limited our analysis to nulliparous women. Results: A total of 118 nulliparous women with endometriosis and 1,690 nulliparous controls were identified. Women with endometriosis were significantly older, had a lower body mass index, and had a higher incidence of assisted reproductive technology. The duration of pregnancy was significantly shorter among women with endometriosis. A higher incidence of placenta previa (3.4 vs. 0.5%; p = 0.006), hypertension (11 vs. 5.9%; p = 0.04), cesarean section (41.5 vs. 24.2%; p < 0.0001), and vacuum delivery (10.1 vs. 2.9%; p = 0.006) was found in women with endometriosis. Neonatal outcomes were similar between groups. The incidence of placenta previa in patients with deep endometriosis was 11.7 versus 0.5% among controls (p < 0.0001), whereas in women with ovarian and peritoneal endometriosis, it was similar to the controls. Conclusion: Women with endometriosis have a higher incidence of vacuum delivery, cesarean section, and placenta previa compared with unaffected women. The higher risk of placenta previa is attributable exclusively to women with deep endometriosis. Neonatal outcomes are unaffected by the presence of the disease
Structures of DNA duplexes containing O-6-carboxymethylguanine, a lesion associated with gastrointestinal cancer, reveal a mechanism for inducing pyrimidine transition mutations
N-nitrosation of glycine and its derivatives generates
potent alkylating agents that can lead to the
formation of O6-carboxymethylguanine (O6-CMG) in
DNA. O6-CMG has been identified in DNA derived
from human colon tissue, and its occurrence has
been linked to diets high in red and processed
meats. By analogy to O6-methylguanine, O6-CMG
is expected to be highly mutagenic, inducing G to
A mutations during DNA replication that can
increase the risk of gastrointestinal and other
cancers. Two crystal structures of DNA dodecamers
d(CGCG[O6-CMG]ATTCGCG) and d(CGC[O6-CMG]A
ATTCGCG) in complex with Hoechst33258 reveal
that each can form a self-complementary duplex
to retain the B-form conformation. Electron density
maps clearly show that O6-CMG forms a Watson–
Crick–type pair with thymine similar to the canonical
A:T pair, and it forms a reversed wobble pair with
cytosine. In situ structural modeling suggests that a
DNA polymerase can accept the Watson–Crick–type
pair of O6-CMG with thymine, but might also accept
the reversed wobble pair of O6-CMG with cytosine.
Thus, O6-CMG would permit the mis-incorporation
of dTTP during DNA replication. Alternatively, the
triphosphate that would be formed by
carboxymethylation of the nucleotide triphosphate
pool d[O6-CMG]TP might compete with dATP incorporation
opposite thymine in a DNA template