First trimester screening cannot predict adverse outcomes yet. [Review]

MedStar author(s):
Citation: Prenatal Diagnosis. 34(7):668-76, 2014 Jul.PMID: 24855016Institution: MedStar Washington Hospital CenterDepartment: Obstetrics and Gynecology, Maternal-Fetal MedicineForm of publication: Journal ArticleMedline article type(s): Journal Article | ReviewSubject headings: *Pregnancy Complications/di [Diagnosis] | *Pregnancy Trimester, First | *Prenatal Diagnosis | Biological Markers/bl [Blood] | Female | Humans | Predictive Value of Tests | Pregnancy | Pregnancy Complications/bl [Blood] | Pregnancy Outcome | Pregnancy Trimester, First/bl [Blood] | Prenatal Diagnosis/mt [Methods] | Prenatal Diagnosis/st [Standards] | Prognosis | Time FactorsISSN:
  • 0197-3851
Name of journal: Prenatal diagnosisAbstract: The use of first trimester screening to detect aneuploidy has become an integral part of prenatal care. The application of similar screening algorithms to identify women at the highest risk for other adverse pregnancy outcomes in the first trimester could potentially have a major clinical impact. There has been much investigation into the ability to identify patients early in pregnancy at high risk for adverse pregnancy outcomes who may benefit from further surveillance and/or intervention. For this to be the case, however, as is true of any useful screening test, effective interventions need to be available. Unfortunately, for fetal growth restriction and stillbirth, no such interventions exist short of delivery. For preeclampsia, low dose aspirin has been demonstrated to be of benefit in specific subgroups. For preterm birth, although there are efficacious treatments, first trimester serum markers or cervical length measurements do not add significantly beyond historical or demographic factors, in prediction of preterm birth. Given the current evidence, first trimester screening, via serum or ultrasound markers, does not have sufficiently high enough positive predictive values for the development of preeclampsia, fetal growth restriction, preterm birth or stillbirth. In order to develop effective screening algorithms for adverse pregnancy outcomes in the first trimester, understanding the heterogeneous phenotype of these complications and the underlying pathophysiology is needed.Copyright � 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.All authors: Halscott TL, Ramsey PS, Reddy UMDigital Object Identifier: Date added to catalog: 2015-04-29
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Journal Article MedStar Authors Catalog Article Available 24855016

The use of first trimester screening to detect aneuploidy has become an integral part of prenatal care. The application of similar screening algorithms to identify women at the highest risk for other adverse pregnancy outcomes in the first trimester could potentially have a major clinical impact. There has been much investigation into the ability to identify patients early in pregnancy at high risk for adverse pregnancy outcomes who may benefit from further surveillance and/or intervention. For this to be the case, however, as is true of any useful screening test, effective interventions need to be available. Unfortunately, for fetal growth restriction and stillbirth, no such interventions exist short of delivery. For preeclampsia, low dose aspirin has been demonstrated to be of benefit in specific subgroups. For preterm birth, although there are efficacious treatments, first trimester serum markers or cervical length measurements do not add significantly beyond historical or demographic factors, in prediction of preterm birth. Given the current evidence, first trimester screening, via serum or ultrasound markers, does not have sufficiently high enough positive predictive values for the development of preeclampsia, fetal growth restriction, preterm birth or stillbirth. In order to develop effective screening algorithms for adverse pregnancy outcomes in the first trimester, understanding the heterogeneous phenotype of these complications and the underlying pathophysiology is needed.Copyright � 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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