Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of a uniform management protocol in antiphospholipid–antibody-positive obstetric patients with at least one second- or third-trimester intra-uterine fetal death.
...Study design: A prospective study of 33 successive pregnancies in antiphospholipid–antibody-positive patients, diagnosed after an intra-uterine fetal death. The management included treatment by a combination of aspirin and low-molecular-weight heparin, and a close follow-up with at least clinical examination, ultrasonography, uterine, and umbilical artery Doppler monthly from the first trimester. In the absence of any anomaly, delivery was induced between 37 and 38 weeks’ gestation.
Results: In this high risk population, seven recurrences of vascular pathology occurred: five cases of mild, isolated fetal growth retardation and one of preeclampsia associated with fetal growth retardation requiring preterm delivery. Eight patients were delivered before 37 weeks. No recurrence of second- or third-trimester fetal death was observed. Uterine artery Doppler was informative as early as the first trimester (12–15 weeks): a bilateral notch was associated with a lower birthweight (2626±688
g versus 3178±353
g, respectively,
P=0.01), despite similar gestational age. The negative predictive value of uterine Doppler was more than 92% at 12–15 weeks’ gestation and remained high throughout pregnancy.
Conclusion: Although intra-uterine fetal death is considered at high risk of recurrence in case of antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), a uniform management protocol including aspirin and heparin and close obstetrical follow-up led to a favorable outcome in most cases.
Worldwide, approximately 5 to 10% of the population is infected by a Human Papilloma Virus (HPV). Some of these viruses, with a high oncogenic risk (HPV HR), are responsible for about 5% of cancer. ...It is now accepted that almost all carcinomas of the cervix and the vulva are due to an HPV HR (HPV16 and 18) infection. However, these viruses are known to be involved in the carcinogenesis of many other cancers (head and neck SCCHN, penis, anus). For head and neck cancer, HPV infection is considered as a good prognostic factor. The role of HPV HR in anal cancer is also extensively studied in high-risk patient's population. The role of HPV infection in the carcinogenesis of esophageal, bladder, lung, breast or skin cancers is still debated. Given the multiple possible locations of HPV HR infection, the question of optimizing the management of patients with a HPV+ cancer arises in the implementation of a comprehensive clinical and biological monitoring. It is the same in therapeutics with the existence of a preventive vaccination, for example.