Competing risks model in screening for preeclampsia by maternal characteristics and medical history

Objective The purpose of this study was to develop a model for preeclampsia based on maternal demographic characteristics and medical history. Study Design This was a screening study of 120,492 singleton pregnancies at 11-13 weeks' gestation, including 2704 pregnancies (2.2%) that experienced p...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of obstetrics and gynecology 2015-07, Vol.213 (1), p.62.e1-62.e10
Hauptverfasser: Wright, David, PhD, Syngelaki, Argyro, RM, Akolekar, Ranjit, MD, Poon, Leona C., MD, Nicolaides, Kypros H., MD
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective The purpose of this study was to develop a model for preeclampsia based on maternal demographic characteristics and medical history. Study Design This was a screening study of 120,492 singleton pregnancies at 11-13 weeks' gestation, including 2704 pregnancies (2.2%) that experienced preeclampsia. A survival-time model for the gestational age at delivery with preeclampsia was developed from variables of maternal characteristics and history. This approach assumes that, if the pregnancy was to continue indefinitely, all women would experience preeclampsia and that whether they do so or not before a specified gestational age depends on competition between delivery before or after development of preeclampsia. A 5-fold cross validation study was conducted to compare the performance of the new model with the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines. Results In the new model, increased risk for preeclampsia, with a consequent shift in the Gaussian distribution of the gestational age at delivery with preeclampsia to the left, is provided by advancing maternal age, increasing weight, Afro-Caribbean and South Asian racial origin, medical history of chronic hypertension, diabetes mellitus and systemic lupus erythematosus or antiphospholipid syndrome, family history and personal history of preeclampsia, and conception by in vitro fertilization. The risk for preeclampsia decreases with increasing maternal height and in parous women with no previous preeclampsia; in the latter, the protective effect, which is related inversely to the interpregnancy interval, persists beyond 15 years. At a screen-positive rate of 11%, as defined by NICE, the new model predicted 40%, 48%, and 54% of cases of total preeclampsia and preeclampsia requiring delivery at
ISSN:0002-9378
1097-6868
DOI:10.1016/j.ajog.2015.02.018