Background:Perinatal care of esophageal atresia (EA) may be improved by prenatal diagnosis. Ultrasound findings (polyhydramnios and/or nonvisualization of fetal stomach) lead to a detection rate of ∼50%. An amniotic fluid (AF) biochemical pattern characterized by high total protein, γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGTP), and normal l-leucine-aminopeptidase (AMP) leads to a 100% detection rate. The aim of this study was to explain this specific pattern.Methods:On the basis of enzyme activities assay, the following four objectives were sought: (i) comparing AF markers between EA and other digestive tract atresias, (ii) determining local GGTP synthesis in the esophagus (immunohistobiochemistry), (iii) determining the presence of a specific AF-AMP activity inhibitor, and (iv) comparing AF-AMP and AF-GGTP half-lives.Results:The AF-EA pattern was similar to that observed in upper duodenal atresia (above the Oddi sphincter). No local synthesis of GGTP was observed in the esophagus. No AF-AMP activity inhibitor was found. AF-GGTP had a longer half-life than AF-AMP.Conclusion:Due to the swallowing anomaly observed in EA, GGTP and AMP values physiologically observed at 18 wk will decrease on the basis of the half-lives of markers, with a flat slope for GGTP and a sharp slope for AMP, therefore explaining the differences observed in the AF-EA pattern. © 2013 International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Muller, C., Czerkiewicz, I., Guimiot, F., Dreux, S., Salomon, L. J., Khen-Dunlop, N., … Muller, F. (2013). Specific biochemical amniotic fluid pattern of fetal isolated esophageal atresia. Pediatric Research, 74(5), 601–605. https://doi.org/10.1038/pr.2013.131
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