Cargando…

Antenatal placental assessment in the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcome after reduced fetal movement

OBJECTIVE: To assess the value of in utero placental assessment in predicting adverse pregnancy outcome after reported reduced fetal movements (RFM). METHOD: A non-interventional prospective cohort study of women (N = 300) with subjective RFM at ≥28 weeks’ gestation in singleton non-anomalous pregna...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Higgins, Lucy E., Myers, Jenny E., Sibley, Colin P., Johnstone, Edward D., Heazell, Alexander E. P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6218043/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30395584
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206533
_version_ 1783368387702816768
author Higgins, Lucy E.
Myers, Jenny E.
Sibley, Colin P.
Johnstone, Edward D.
Heazell, Alexander E. P.
author_facet Higgins, Lucy E.
Myers, Jenny E.
Sibley, Colin P.
Johnstone, Edward D.
Heazell, Alexander E. P.
author_sort Higgins, Lucy E.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To assess the value of in utero placental assessment in predicting adverse pregnancy outcome after reported reduced fetal movements (RFM). METHOD: A non-interventional prospective cohort study of women (N = 300) with subjective RFM at ≥28 weeks’ gestation in singleton non-anomalous pregnancies at a UK tertiary maternity hospital. Clinical, sonographic (fetal weight, placental size and maternal, fetal and placental arterial Doppler) and biochemical (maternal serum hCG, hPL, progesterone, PlGF and sFlt-1) assessment was conducted. Multiple logistic regression identified combinations of measurements (models) most predictive of adverse pregnancy outcome (perinatal mortality, birth weight <10(th) centile, five minute Apgar score <7, umbilical arterial pH <7.1 or base excess <-10, neonatal intensive care admission). Models were compared by test performance characteristics (ROC curve, sensitivity, specificity, positive/negative predictive value, positive/negative likelihood ratios) against baseline care (estimated fetal weight centile, amniotic fluid index and gestation at presentation). RESULTS: 61 (20.6%) pregnancies ended in adverse outcome. Models incorporating PlGF/sFlt-1 ratio and umbilical artery free loop Doppler impedance demonstrated modest improvement in ROC area for adverse outcome (baseline care 0.69 vs. proposed models 0.73–0.76, p<0.05). However, there was little improvement in other test characteristics (baseline vs. best proposed model: sensitivity 21.7% [95% confidence interval 13.1–33.6] vs. 35.8%% [24.4–49.3], specificity 96.6% [93.4–98.3] vs. 94.7% [90.7–97.0], PPV 61.9% [40.9–79.3] vs. 63.3% [45.5–78.1], NPV 82.8% [77.9–86.8] vs. 85.2% [80.0–89.2], positive LR 6.3 [2.8–14.6] vs. 6.7 [3.4–3.3], negative LR 0.81 [0.71–0.93] vs. 0.68 [0.55–0.83]) and wide confidence intervals. Negative post-test probability remained high (16.7% vs. 14.0%). CONCLUSION: Antenatal placental assessment may improve identification of RFM pregnancies at highest risk of adverse pregnancy outcome but further work is required to understand and refine currently available outcome definitions and diagnostic techniques to improve clinical utility.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6218043
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-62180432018-11-19 Antenatal placental assessment in the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcome after reduced fetal movement Higgins, Lucy E. Myers, Jenny E. Sibley, Colin P. Johnstone, Edward D. Heazell, Alexander E. P. PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: To assess the value of in utero placental assessment in predicting adverse pregnancy outcome after reported reduced fetal movements (RFM). METHOD: A non-interventional prospective cohort study of women (N = 300) with subjective RFM at ≥28 weeks’ gestation in singleton non-anomalous pregnancies at a UK tertiary maternity hospital. Clinical, sonographic (fetal weight, placental size and maternal, fetal and placental arterial Doppler) and biochemical (maternal serum hCG, hPL, progesterone, PlGF and sFlt-1) assessment was conducted. Multiple logistic regression identified combinations of measurements (models) most predictive of adverse pregnancy outcome (perinatal mortality, birth weight <10(th) centile, five minute Apgar score <7, umbilical arterial pH <7.1 or base excess <-10, neonatal intensive care admission). Models were compared by test performance characteristics (ROC curve, sensitivity, specificity, positive/negative predictive value, positive/negative likelihood ratios) against baseline care (estimated fetal weight centile, amniotic fluid index and gestation at presentation). RESULTS: 61 (20.6%) pregnancies ended in adverse outcome. Models incorporating PlGF/sFlt-1 ratio and umbilical artery free loop Doppler impedance demonstrated modest improvement in ROC area for adverse outcome (baseline care 0.69 vs. proposed models 0.73–0.76, p<0.05). However, there was little improvement in other test characteristics (baseline vs. best proposed model: sensitivity 21.7% [95% confidence interval 13.1–33.6] vs. 35.8%% [24.4–49.3], specificity 96.6% [93.4–98.3] vs. 94.7% [90.7–97.0], PPV 61.9% [40.9–79.3] vs. 63.3% [45.5–78.1], NPV 82.8% [77.9–86.8] vs. 85.2% [80.0–89.2], positive LR 6.3 [2.8–14.6] vs. 6.7 [3.4–3.3], negative LR 0.81 [0.71–0.93] vs. 0.68 [0.55–0.83]) and wide confidence intervals. Negative post-test probability remained high (16.7% vs. 14.0%). CONCLUSION: Antenatal placental assessment may improve identification of RFM pregnancies at highest risk of adverse pregnancy outcome but further work is required to understand and refine currently available outcome definitions and diagnostic techniques to improve clinical utility. Public Library of Science 2018-11-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6218043/ /pubmed/30395584 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206533 Text en © 2018 Higgins et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Higgins, Lucy E.
Myers, Jenny E.
Sibley, Colin P.
Johnstone, Edward D.
Heazell, Alexander E. P.
Antenatal placental assessment in the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcome after reduced fetal movement
title Antenatal placental assessment in the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcome after reduced fetal movement
title_full Antenatal placental assessment in the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcome after reduced fetal movement
title_fullStr Antenatal placental assessment in the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcome after reduced fetal movement
title_full_unstemmed Antenatal placental assessment in the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcome after reduced fetal movement
title_short Antenatal placental assessment in the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcome after reduced fetal movement
title_sort antenatal placental assessment in the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcome after reduced fetal movement
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6218043/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30395584
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206533
work_keys_str_mv AT higginslucye antenatalplacentalassessmentinthepredictionofadversepregnancyoutcomeafterreducedfetalmovement
AT myersjennye antenatalplacentalassessmentinthepredictionofadversepregnancyoutcomeafterreducedfetalmovement
AT sibleycolinp antenatalplacentalassessmentinthepredictionofadversepregnancyoutcomeafterreducedfetalmovement
AT johnstoneedwardd antenatalplacentalassessmentinthepredictionofadversepregnancyoutcomeafterreducedfetalmovement
AT heazellalexanderep antenatalplacentalassessmentinthepredictionofadversepregnancyoutcomeafterreducedfetalmovement