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The Registry of Pregnant Women at Cruces University Hospital: an ethical framework for prospective research with preanalytical optimization of maternal plasma processing
Background: Prospective pregnancy registries and biobanking infrastructures are essential for future translational studies investigating maternal, placental and offspring health. However, circulating nucleic acid analyses are highly sensitive to preanalytical variability, particularly regarding blood-collection tube type and sample processing conditions. We established a prospective pregnancy registry and biobanking workflow at Cruces University Hospital and evaluated the impact of preanalytical variables on circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) and cell-free RNA (cfRNA) preservation in maternal plasma collected at delivery. Methods: The Registry of Pregnant Women at Cruces University Hospital was designed as a prospective infrastructure integrating placental sampling, maternal blood collection and ethically controlled future access to maternal and offspring clinical data. Within this framework, peripheral blood samples from 50 women at delivery were simultaneously collected into EDTA, Norgen and Roche tubes. Plasma samples processed within or after 24 hours following collection underwent cfDNA/cfRNA extraction, electrophoretic profiling, fluorometric quantification and RT-qPCR analyses targeting different stress-related genes. Results: By the end of June 2026, 1,127 women had been prospectively recruited into the registry, with 661 plasma samples, 637 serum samples and 858 sets of four placental biopsies collected, processed and stored in the Basque Biobank. In the preanalytical substudy, EDTA tubes yielded higher cfDNA concentrations, likely reflecting reduced cellular preservation and genomic DNA contamination. In contrast, Roche tubes showed superior cfRNA preservation, with higher cfRNA concentrations and more consistent detection of the characteristic 5S rRNA peak compared with EDTA and Norgen tubes. Processing delays beyond 24 hours reduced cfRNA concentration, while associations between circulating transcripts and gestational age were more consistently detectable in preservative-containing tubes. Conclusions: Prospective infrastructures like ours offer strong foundation for large scale, long-term studies in the framework of the Developmental Origins of Health and Disease hypothesis. Technically, Roche tubes provided superior cfRNA preservation and enhanced sensitivity for detecting subtle biological associations, supporting the importance of standardized preanalytical workflows within prospective pregnancy biobanking resource.
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