Development and validation of a spontaneous preterm delivery predictor in asymptomatic women
Author Department
Ob/Gyn
Document Type
Article, Peer-reviewed
Publication Date
5-2017
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Preterm delivery remains the leading cause of perinatal mortality. Risk factors and biomarkers have traditionally failed to identify the majority of preterm deliveries.
OBJECTIVE:
To develop and validate a mass spectrometry-based serum test to predict spontaneous preterm delivery in asymptomatic pregnant women.
STUDY DESIGN:
A total of 5501 pregnant women were enrolled between 17(0/7) and 28(6/7) weeks gestational age in the prospective Proteomic Assessment of Preterm Risk study at 11 sites in the United States between 2011 and 2013. Maternal blood was collected at enrollment and outcomes collected following delivery. Maternal serum was processed by a proteomic workflow, and proteins were quantified by multiple reaction monitoring mass spectrometry. The discovery and verification process identified 2 serum proteins, insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 4 (IBP4) and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), as predictors of spontaneous preterm delivery. We evaluated a predictor using the log ratio of the measures of IBP4 and SHBG (IBP4/SHBG) in a clinical validation study to classify spontaneous preterm delivery cases (<37(0/7) weeks gestational age) in a nested case-control cohort different from subjects used in discovery and verification. Strict blinding and independent statistical analyses were employed.
RESULTS:
The predictor had an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve value of 0.75 and sensitivity and specificity of 0.75 and 0.74, respectively. The IBP4/SHBG predictor at this sensitivity and specificity had an odds ratio of 5.04 for spontaneous preterm delivery. Accuracy of the IBP4/SHBG predictor increased using earlier case-vs-control gestational age cutoffs (eg, <35(0/7) vs ≥35(0/7) weeks gestational age). Importantly, higher-risk subjects defined by the IBP4/SHBG predictor score generally gave birth earlier than lower-risk subjects.
CONCLUSION:
A serum-based molecular predictor identifies asymptomatic pregnant women at risk of spontaneous preterm delivery, which may provide utility in identifying women at risk at an early stage of pregnancy to allow for clinical intervention. This early detection would guide enhanced levels of care and accelerate development of clinical strategies to prevent preterm delivery.
Recommended Citation
Saade GR, Boggess KA, Sullivan SA, Markenson GR, Iams JD, Coonrod DV, Pereira LM, Esplin MS, Cousins LM, Lam GK, Hoffman MK, Severinsen RD, Pugmire T, Flick JS, Fox AC, Lueth AJ, Rust SR, Mazzola E, Hsu C, Dufford MT, Bradford CL, Ichetovkin IE, Fleischer TC, Polpitiya AD, Critchfield GC, Kearney PE, Boniface JJ, Hickok DE. Development and validation of a spontaneous preterm delivery predictor in asymptomatic women. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2016 May;214(5):633.e1-633.e24.
PMID
26874297