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First safe way to deliver drugs to the placenta

21 May 2016

Researchers devise method to treat pregnancy complications without harming baby

Pregnant woman

For the first time, researchers have devised a method to selectively deliver drugs to a pregnant woman’s placenta without harming the foetus, in a development which could help prevent some premature births and treat conditions such as pre-eclampsia.

The University scientists, writing in the journal Science Advances, have demonstrated that two peptides – chains of amino acids – originally used to target tumours selectively, will perform the same function on a placenta, delivering drugs which improve placental function and benefit the growing baby without causing it harm.

Many pregnancy complications are caused by the placenta not growing or functioning correctly. But currently there are no drugs that can be used to treat pregnancy complications, such as pre-eclampsia or foetal growth restriction, which affect more than ten percent of pregnant women.

Instead doctors have to induce early delivery of the baby.  Premature babies are at increased risk of developing infections and cerebral palsy and throughout their lives have an increased risk of heart disease and diabetes. 

The research has the potential to avoid these problems by treating the baby inside the mother and avoiding induced labour.

Lead researcher Dr Lynda Harris explained:  “Placentas behave like well-controlled tumours. They grow quickly, produce growth hormones and evade the immune system.

“A lot of cancer research focuses on finding ways of delivering drugs to kill the tumour without affecting the rest of the body.  We had the idea that if we could selectively target the placenta in the same way, we could deliver other drugs which help improve placental function and therefore treat pregnancy complications.”

Dr Harris added: “Only one drug for use during pregnancy has been licensed in the last twenty years.  By developing this platform we have opened up the possibility of any number of new drugs which can be adapted and then used safely to treat common and serious pregnancy complications.”