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Evaluation of 7 serum biomarkers and uterine artery Doppler ultrasound for first-trimester prediction of preeclampsia: a systematic review

Evaluation of 7 serum biomarkers and uterine artery Doppler ultrasound for first-trimester prediction of preeclampsia: a systematic review
Evaluation of 7 serum biomarkers and uterine artery Doppler ultrasound for first-trimester prediction of preeclampsia: a systematic review
Preeclampsia (PE) affects 1% to 2% of pregnant women and is a leading cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality worldwide. The clinical syndrome of PE arises in the second half of pregnancy. However, many underlying factors including defective placentation may already be apparent in the first and early second trimester in many patients. In clinical practice, there is currently no reliable screening method in the first trimester of pregnancy with sufficient accuracy to identify women at high risk to develop PE. Early identification of high-risk pregnancy may facilitate the development of new strategies for antenatal surveillance or prevention and thus improve maternal and perinatal outcome. The aim of this systematic review was to study the literature on the predictive potential of first-trimester serum markers and of uterine artery Doppler velocity waveform assessment (Ut-A Doppler). Literature on the 7 most studied serum markers (ADAM12, f?-hCG, Inhibin A, Activin A, PP13, PlGF, and PAPP-A) and Ut-A Doppler was primarily selected. In the selected literature, a combination of these markers was analyzed, and where relevant, the value of maternal characteristics was added. Measurements of serum markers and Ut-A Doppler were performed between week 8 + 0 and 14 + 0 GA. Low levels of PP13, PlGF, and PAPP-A and elevated level of Inhibin A have been found to be significantly associated with the development of PE later in pregnancy. The detection rates of single markers, fixed at 10% false-positive rate, in the prediction of early-onset PE were relatively low, and ranged from 22% to 83%. Detection rates for combinations of multiple markers varied between 38% and 100%. Therefore, a combination of multiple markers yields high detection rates and is promising to identify patients at high risk of developing PE. However, large scale prospective studies are required to evaluate the power of this integrated approach in clinical practice. Target Audience: Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Family physicians Learning Objectives: After completion of this article, the reader should be better able to appraise the recent literature on the development of preeclampsia in the first-trimester, evaluate the predictive value of first-trimester markers and use first-trimester markers, either individually or in combination, to assess the risk of preeclampsia.
ut-a, preeclampsia, first-trimester, papp-a, plgf, uterine artery, doppler, inhibin, artery doppler, marker, uterine, pregnancy, serum, systematic review, serum biomarker
0029-7828
225-239
Kuc, Sylwia
d00e7685-8895-4da6-8b4f-0f249808ac7a
Wortelboer, Esther J.
15060a7c-faae-4da5-abfb-870a1167fce1
van Rijn, Bas B.
c958dfb5-2010-46de-a350-4903295ac340
Franx, Arie
2376857f-07db-4821-9512-a7b55036b6f0
Visser, Gerard H. A.
41e005b2-4774-49d8-86e5-be17665c29fc
Schielen, Peter C. J. I.
f345fb9a-19e2-471b-9203-a6cd5b030b68
Kuc, Sylwia
d00e7685-8895-4da6-8b4f-0f249808ac7a
Wortelboer, Esther J.
15060a7c-faae-4da5-abfb-870a1167fce1
van Rijn, Bas B.
c958dfb5-2010-46de-a350-4903295ac340
Franx, Arie
2376857f-07db-4821-9512-a7b55036b6f0
Visser, Gerard H. A.
41e005b2-4774-49d8-86e5-be17665c29fc
Schielen, Peter C. J. I.
f345fb9a-19e2-471b-9203-a6cd5b030b68

Kuc, Sylwia, Wortelboer, Esther J., van Rijn, Bas B., Franx, Arie, Visser, Gerard H. A. and Schielen, Peter C. J. I. (2011) Evaluation of 7 serum biomarkers and uterine artery Doppler ultrasound for first-trimester prediction of preeclampsia: a systematic review. Obstetrical and Gynecological Survey, 66 (4), 225-239. (doi:10.1097/OGX.0b013e3182227027). (PMID:21756405)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Preeclampsia (PE) affects 1% to 2% of pregnant women and is a leading cause of maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality worldwide. The clinical syndrome of PE arises in the second half of pregnancy. However, many underlying factors including defective placentation may already be apparent in the first and early second trimester in many patients. In clinical practice, there is currently no reliable screening method in the first trimester of pregnancy with sufficient accuracy to identify women at high risk to develop PE. Early identification of high-risk pregnancy may facilitate the development of new strategies for antenatal surveillance or prevention and thus improve maternal and perinatal outcome. The aim of this systematic review was to study the literature on the predictive potential of first-trimester serum markers and of uterine artery Doppler velocity waveform assessment (Ut-A Doppler). Literature on the 7 most studied serum markers (ADAM12, f?-hCG, Inhibin A, Activin A, PP13, PlGF, and PAPP-A) and Ut-A Doppler was primarily selected. In the selected literature, a combination of these markers was analyzed, and where relevant, the value of maternal characteristics was added. Measurements of serum markers and Ut-A Doppler were performed between week 8 + 0 and 14 + 0 GA. Low levels of PP13, PlGF, and PAPP-A and elevated level of Inhibin A have been found to be significantly associated with the development of PE later in pregnancy. The detection rates of single markers, fixed at 10% false-positive rate, in the prediction of early-onset PE were relatively low, and ranged from 22% to 83%. Detection rates for combinations of multiple markers varied between 38% and 100%. Therefore, a combination of multiple markers yields high detection rates and is promising to identify patients at high risk of developing PE. However, large scale prospective studies are required to evaluate the power of this integrated approach in clinical practice. Target Audience: Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Family physicians Learning Objectives: After completion of this article, the reader should be better able to appraise the recent literature on the development of preeclampsia in the first-trimester, evaluate the predictive value of first-trimester markers and use first-trimester markers, either individually or in combination, to assess the risk of preeclampsia.

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More information

Published date: April 2011
Keywords: ut-a, preeclampsia, first-trimester, papp-a, plgf, uterine artery, doppler, inhibin, artery doppler, marker, uterine, pregnancy, serum, systematic review, serum biomarker
Organisations: Human Development & Health

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Local EPrints ID: 352071
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/352071
ISSN: 0029-7828
PURE UUID: 8cbc07b2-4689-484f-81ff-07056403fe7f

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Date deposited: 02 May 2013 09:06
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 13:47

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Contributors

Author: Sylwia Kuc
Author: Esther J. Wortelboer
Author: Bas B. van Rijn
Author: Arie Franx
Author: Gerard H. A. Visser
Author: Peter C. J. I. Schielen

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