Placental dysfunction underlies the major obstetric syndromes, including preeclampsia, fetal growth restriction, placenta accreta spectrum, pregnancy loss, and monochorionic twin complications. Recent molecular studies have revealed that dysregulated oxygen sensing, impaired angiogenic signaling, altered immune tolerance, and defective trophoblast fusion represent shared pathogenic pathways that converge across these disorders. Integrating morphological evidence with mechanistic data highlights how villous maldevelopment, shallow trophoblast invasion, and aberrant vascular remodeling translate into clinical disease. Advances in biomarker research have already transformed clinical care: the sFlt-1/PlGF ratio is now established in the prediction and management of preeclampsia, while placental proteins such as PAPP-A and PP13, nucleic acid signatures including cfDNA, cfRNA and miRNAs, and extracellular vesicle cargo show promising potential for early, non-invasive detection of placental pathology. Multi-omics approaches, particularly single-cell and spatial transcriptomics combined with proteomic and metabolomic profiling, are paving the way for composite diagnostic panels that capture the polygenic and multicellular nature of placental disease. This review synthesizes current knowledge of molecular mechanisms, histological correlates, and translational biomarkers, and outlines how precision obstetrics may emerge from bridging mechanistic discoveries with clinical applications.
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Ioana Vornic
Vasile Goldis Western University of Arad
Radu Căprariu
Victor Babeș University of Medicine and Pharmacy Timișoara
Dorin Novacescu
Victor Babeș University of Medicine and Pharmacy Timișoara
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Victor Babeș University of Medicine and Pharmacy Timișoara
Vasile Goldis Western University of Arad
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Vornic et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68dd91dafe798ba2fc4992e6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26199483
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