AUTHOR=Torres-Torres Johnatan , Espino-y-Sosa Salvador , Villafan-Bernal Jose Rafael , Orozco-Guzman Luis Enrique , Solis-Paredes Juan Mario , Estrada-Gutierrez Guadalupe , Martinez-Cisneros Romeo Adalid , Mateu-Rogell Paloma , Acevedo-Gallegos Sandra , Martinez-Portilla Raigam Jafet TITLE=Effects of maternal characteristics and medical history on first trimester biomarkers for preeclampsia JOURNAL=Frontiers in Medicine VOLUME=10 YEAR=2023 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/medicine/articles/10.3389/fmed.2023.1050923 DOI=10.3389/fmed.2023.1050923 ISSN=2296-858X ABSTRACT=Objective

To identify and quantify the effects of maternal characteristics and medical history on the distribution of Placental Growth Factor (PlGF), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and Uterine Artery Mean Pulsatility Index (UtA-PI); and to standardize the expected values for these biomarkers in the first trimester to create unique multiples of the median (MoMs) for Latin-American population.

Methods

This is a prospective cohort built exclusively for research purposes of consecutive pregnant women attending their first-trimester screening ultrasound at a primary care center for the general population in Mexico City between April 2019 and October 2021. We excluded fetuses with chromosomal abnormalities, major fetal malformations, and women delivering in another care center. Linear regression was used on log-transformed biomarkers to assess the influence of maternal characteristics on non-preeclamptic women to create MoM.

Results

Of a total of 2,820 pregnant women included in the final analysis, 118 (4.18%) developed PE, of which 22 (0.78%) delivered before 34 weeks of gestation, 74 (2.62%) before 37 weeks, and 44 (1.56%) from 37 weeks gestation. Characteristics that significantly influenced PLGF were fetal crown rump length (CRL), maternal age, nulliparity, body mass index (BMI), chronic hypertension, Lupus, spontaneous pregnancy, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), hypothyroidism, preeclampsia (PE) in a previous pregnancy, and mother with PE. MAP had significant influence from CRL, maternal age, PE in a previous pregnancy, induction of ovulation, a mother with PE, chronic hypertension, BMI, and hypothyroidism. UtA-PI was influenced by CRL, maternal age, a mother with PE, chronic hypertension, and gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) in a previous pregnancy.

Conclusion

Population-specific multiples of the median (MoMs) for PlGF, MAP, and UtA-PI in the first trimester adequately discriminate among women developing preeclampsia later in pregnancy.