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Browsing by Author "Major, Carol A."
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Item Performance of a proteomic preterm delivery predictor in a large independent prospective cohort(Elsevier, 2020-08) Markenson, Glenn R.; Saade, George R.; Laurent, Louise C.; Heyborne, Kent D.; Coonrod, Dean V.; Schoen, Corina N.; Baxter, Jason K.; Haas, David M.; Longo, Sherri; Grobman, William A.; Sullivan, Scott A.; Major, Carol A.; Wheeler, Sarahn M.; Pereira, Leonardo M.; Su, Emily J.; Boggess, Kim A.; Hawk, Angela F.; Crockett, Amy H.; Fox, Angela C.; Polpitiya, Ashoka; Fleischer, Tracey C.; Critchfield, Gregory C.; Burchard, Julja; Boniface, J. Jay; Lam, Garrett K.; Obstetrics and Gynecology, School of MedicineBackground Preterm birth remains a common and devastating complication of pregnancy. There remains a need for effective and accurate screening methods for preterm birth. Using a proteomic approach, we previously discovered and validated (Proteomic Assessment of Preterm Risk study, NCT01371019) a preterm birth predictor comprising a ratio of insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 4 to sex hormone-binding globulin. Objective To determine the performance of the ratio of insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 4 to sex hormone-binding globulin to predict both spontaneous and medically indicated very preterm births, in an independent cohort distinct from the one in which it was developed. Study Design This was a prospective observational study (Multicenter Assessment of a Spontaneous Preterm Birth Risk Predictor, NCT02787213) at 18 sites in the United States. Women had blood drawn at 170/7 to 216/7 weeks’ gestation. For confirmation, we planned to analyze a randomly selected subgroup of women having blood drawn between 191/7 and 206/7 weeks’ gestation, with the results of the remaining study participants blinded for future validation studies. Serum from participants was analyzed by mass spectrometry. Neonatal morbidity and mortality were analyzed using a composite score by a method from the PREGNANT trial (NCT00615550, Hassan et al). Scores of 0–3 reflect increasing numbers of morbidities or length of neonatal intensive care unit stay, and 4 represents perinatal mortality. Results A total of 5011 women were enrolled, with 847 included in this planned substudy analysis. There were 9 preterm birth cases at <320/7 weeks’ gestation and 838 noncases at ≥320/7 weeks’ gestation; 21 of 847 infants had neonatal composite morbidity and mortality index scores of ≥3, and 4 of 21 had a score of 4. The ratio of insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 4 to sex hormone-binding globulin ratio was substantially higher in both preterm births at <320/7 weeks’ gestation and there were more severe neonatal outcomes. The ratio of insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 4 to sex hormone-binding globulin ratio was significantly predictive of birth at <320/7 weeks’ gestation (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, 0.71; 95% confidence interval, 0.55–0.87; P=.016). Stratification by body mass index, optimized in the previous validation study (22