1. Mass spectrometry of water-soluble vitamins to establish a risk model for predicting recurrent spontaneous abortion
- Author
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Bitao Wu, Zhenghao Li, Bi Peng, Qiang Yang, Wenqiang Jiang, Ying Ma, Jie Tang, and Yuwei Yang
- Subjects
Recurrent spontaneous abortion ,Water-soluble vitamins ,Baseline ,Mass spectrometry ,Risk model ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The adverse pregnancy outcomes, including recurrent spontaneous abortion (RSA), are strongly correlated with water-soluble vitamins, but how to predict RSA occurrence using them remains unsatisfactory. This study aims to investigate the possibility of predicting RSA based on the baseline levels of water-soluble vitamins tested by ultra-liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. A total of 918 pregnant women was consecutively enrolled in this cross-sectional study. According to the miscarriage numbers, they were divided into normal first pregnancy (NFP, n = 608), once spontaneous abortion (OSA, n = 167), and continuous spontaneous abortion (CSA, n = 143) groups. The Cox proportional-hazards regression model was employed to establish a risk model for predicting RSA. The RSA occurrence was 6.54% in overall pregnant women, with a prevalence of 12.57% in the OSA group and 27.27% in the CSA group. Significant differences were observed in baseline deficiencies of vitamin B3, B5, B6, and B9 among NFP, OSA, and CSA groups (χ2 = 12.191 ~ 37.561, all P 0.05). Our study presents a highly sensitive model based on mass spectrometry assay of baseline levels in B vitamins to predict the RSA occurrence as possible.
- Published
- 2024
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