Maternal Serum Meteorin Levels and the Risk of Preeclampsia
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Data de publicación
2015Título da revista
PLoS One
Tipo de contido
Artigo
DeCS
Adulto | Adulto Joven | Antropometría | Embarazo | Estudios de Casos y Controles | Factores de Riesgo | Femenino | Humanos | Inmunohistoquímica | Modelos Logísticos | Placenta | Preeclampsia | Proteínas del Tejido Nervioso | Péptidos y Proteínas de Señalización Intercelular | Trimestres del Embarazo | Árboles de DecisiónMeSH
Adult | Anthropometry | Case-Control Studies | Decision Trees | Female | Humans | Immunohistochemistry | Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins | Logistic Models | Nerve Tissue Proteins | Placenta | Pre-Eclampsia | Pregnancy | Pregnancy Trimesters | Risk Factors | Young AdultResumo
BACKGROUND: Meteorin (METRN) is a recently described neutrophic factor with angiogenic properties. This is a nested case-control study in a longitudinal cohort study that describes the serum profile of METRN during different periods of gestation in healthy and preeclamptic pregnant women. Moreover, we explore the possible application of METRN as a biomarker. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Serum METRN was measured by ELISA in a longitudinal prospective cohort study in 37 healthy pregnant women, 16 mild preeclamptic women, and 20 healthy non-pregnant women during the menstrual cycle with the aim of assessing serum METRN levels and its correlations with other metabolic parameters. Immunostaining for METRN protein was performed in placenta. A multivariate logistic regression model was proposed and a classifier model was formulated for predicting preeclampsia in early and middle pregnancy. The performance in classification was evaluated using measures such as sensitivity, specificity, and the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve. In healthy pregnant women, serum METRN levels were significantly elevated in early pregnancy compared to middle and late pregnancy. METRN levels are significantly lower only in early pregnancy in preeclamptic women when compared to healthy pregnant women. Decision trees that did not include METRN levels in the first trimester had a reduced sensitivity of 56% in the detection of preeclamptic women, compared to a sensitivity of 69% when METRN was included. CONCLUSIONS: The joint measurements of circulating METRN levels in the first trimester and systolic blood pressure and weight in the second trimester significantly increase the probabilities of predicting preeclampsia.