Publication

Placental Growth Factor informed management of suspected pre-eclampsia or fetal growth restriction: The MAPPLE cohort study.

Journal : Pregnancy hypertension
Authors : Sharp A, Chappell LC, Dekker G, Pelletier S, Garnier Y, Zeren O, Hillerer KM, Fischer T, Seed PT, Turner M, Shennan AH, Alfirevic Z
10.1016/j.preghy.2018.03.013 : DOI
29627351 : PMID

Objectives

Placental Growth Factor (PlGF) has been shown to be beneficial in diagnosing pre-eclampsia. We performed a prospective cohort study of revealed PlGF in standard clinical use in four teaching hospitals in UK, Germany, Austria and Australia.

Study Design

Clinical data from women with suspected pre-eclampsia or fetal growth restriction <35 weeks' gestation with revealed PlGF measurement were collected (MAPPLE study).

Main Outcome Measures

Data were compared to the PELICAN study (PlGF concealed). Pre-specified outcomes were compared using standard statistical tests (median difference or Risk Ratio). The results were further categorised by PlGF concentration: i) very low (100 pg/ml).

Results

396 women managed with revealed PlGF (MAPPLE) were compared with 287 women with concealed PlGF (PELICAN). Revealed PlGF led to delivery 1.4 weeks earlier (-2.0 to -0.9, 34.9 weeks vs 36.7 weeks). There were no significant differences in maternal adverse outcomes (11.9% vs 10.1%, Risk Ratio (RR) 1.17, 95% CI 0.76-1.82) or caesarean sections (73.8% vs 64.5%; RR 1.14, 95% CI 1.03-1.26). Revealed PlGF led to fewer perinatal deaths (2 vs 9; RR 0.16, 95% CI 0.03-0.74) and fewer babies with birthweight <3rd centile (28.9% vs 36.1%; RR 0.80, 0.65-0.99), but with more neonatal adverse outcomes (30.4% vs 17.1%; RR 1.78, 95% CI 1.32-2.41).

Conclusions

Revealed PlGF may be associated with lower perinatal mortality and birthweight <3rd centile but appears to lead to earlier delivery with more neonatal respiratory morbidity. Randomised trials with adequate power for clinical outcomes are needed.

Funding

Financial assistance was received from Alere to support the running of the MAPPLE database. Alere had no access to the information or control over the database itself.