Maternal characteristics and mid-pregnancy serum biomarkers as risk factors for subtypes of preterm birth.

Authors: 
L.L. Jelliffe-Pawlowski; R.J. Baer; Y.J. Blumenfeld; K.K. Ryckman; H.M. O'Brodovich; J.B. Gould; M.L. Druzin; Y.Y. El-Sayed; D.J. Lyell; D.K. Stevenson; G.M. Shaw; R.J. Currier
Abstract: 

OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between maternal characteristics, serum biomarkers and preterm birth (PTB) by spontaneous and medically indicated subtypes.

DESIGN: Population-based cohort.

SETTING: California, United States of America.

POPULATION: From a total population of 1 004 039 live singleton births in 2009 and 2010, 841 665 pregnancies with linked birth certificate and hospital discharge records were included.

METHODS: Characteristics were compared for term and preterm deliveries by PTB subtype using logistic regression and odds ratios adjusted for maternal characteristics and obstetric factors present in final stepwise models and 95% confidence intervals. First-trimester and second-trimester serum marker levels were analysed in a subset of 125 202 pregnancies with available first-trimester and second-trimester serum biomarker results.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: PTB by subtype.

RESULTS: In fully adjusted models, ten characteristics and three serum biomarkers were associated with increased risk in each PTB subtype (Black race/ethnicity, pre-existing hypertension with and without pre-eclampsia, gestational hypertension with pre-eclampsia, pre-existing diabetes, anaemia, previous PTB, one or two or more previous caesarean section(s), interpregnancy interval ≥ 60 months, low first-trimester pregnancy-associated plasma protein A, high second-trimester α-fetoprotein, and high second-trimester dimeric inhibin A). These risks occurred in 51.6-86.2% of all pregnancies ending in PTB depending on subtype. The highest risk observed was for medically indicated PTB

Citation: 

Jelliffe-Pawlowski LL, Baer RJ, Blumenfeld YJ, et al. "Maternal characteristics and mid-pregnancy serum biomarkers as risk factors for subtypes of preterm birth." BJOG. 2015;122(11):1484-93.PubMed

Publication type: 
Journal Article
Year: 
2015
CPQCC publication: 
Yes
CPQCC publications category: 
Epidemiologic studies and supplemental data collection
PubMed ID: 
26111589
PMCID: 
PMC4704442