Objective: The purpose of this study was to predict the occurrence of preeclampsia in a series of patients at gestational week 15-20 weeks, with the use of a panel of messenger RNA markers.
Study design: Data from 62 patients with preeclampsia who were asymptomatic at the time of blood testing and 310 control subjects were analyzed. Multivariable analysis was performed with discriminant analysis.
Results: Univariable analysis identified vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 1 as the marker with the highest detection rate; placenta-specific 1 with the lowest. Mean estimated score for preeclampsia was 9.4 for control subjects and 72.5 for subjects who experienced preeclampsia. A receiver operating characteristic curve that was obtained with the estimated score for preeclampsia as a test variable yielded a detection rate of 84% (95% CI, 71.8-91.5) at a 5% false-positive rate with an area under the curve of 0.927 (P < .001). Again, detection rate and score for each patient for classification as preeclamptic correlated with severity.
Conclusion: A panel of messenger RNA is able to detect subjects who will experience preeclampsia.