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Diagnostic Accuracy of Placental Growth Factor in Women With Suspected Preeclampsia.

Authors :
Chappell, Lucy C.
Duckworth, Suzy
Seed, Paul T.
Griffin, Melanie
Myers, Jenny
Mackillop, Lucy
Simpson, Nigel
Waugh, Jason
Anumba, Dilly
Kenny, Louise C.
Redman, Christopher W. G.
Shennan, Andrew H.
Source :
Circulation. 11/5/2013, Vol. 128 Issue 19, p2121-2131. 11p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Background--Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are a major contributor to death and disability for pregnant women and their infants. The diagnosis of preeclampsia by using blood pressure and proteinuria is of limited use because they are tertiary, downstream features of the disease. Placental growth factor (P1GF) is an angiogenic factor, a secondary marker of associated placental dysfunction in preeclampsia, with known low plasma concentrations in the disease. Methods and Results--In a prospective multicenter study, we studied the diagnostic accuracy of low plasma P1GF concentration (<5th centile for gestation, Alere Triage assay) in women presenting with suspected preeclampsia between 20 and 35 weeks' gestation (and up to 41 weeks' gestation as a secondary analysis). The outcome was delivery for confirmed preeclampsia within 14 days. Of 625 women, 346 (55%) developed confirmed preeclampsia. In 287 women enrolled before 35 weeks' gestation, P1GF <5th centile had high sensitivity (0.96; 95% confidence interval, 0.89-0.99) and negative predictive value (0.98; 0.93-0.995) for preeclampsia within 14 days; specificity was lower (0.55; 0.48-0.61). Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for low P1GF (0.87, standard error 0.03) for predicting preeclampsia within 14 days was greater than all other commonly used tests, singly or in combination (range, 0.58-0.76), in women presenting with suspected preeclampsia (P<0.001 for all comparisons). Conclusions--In women presenting before 35 weeks' gestation with suspected preeclampsia, low P1GF has high sensitivity and negative predictive value for preeclampsia within 14 days, is better than other currently used tests, and presents an innovative adjunct to management of such women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00097322
Volume :
128
Issue :
19
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Circulation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
92007644
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.113.003215