Abstract

(1) Objectivediscover new candidate biomarkers for spontaneous preterm birth in early pregnancy samples. When fully clinically validated, early pregnancy biomarkers for sPTB give the possibility to intervene or monitor high-risk pregnancies more intensively through, as example, pelvic exams, ultrasound or sonographic cervical length surveillance. (2) Study designEarly pregnancy serum samples of eight spontaneous extreme and very preterm birth cases (<32 weeks of gestational age) without any symptoms of preeclampsia and fetal growth restriction and eight uncomplicated pregnancies were analyzed by liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC-MS). Thirteen proteins, which were differentially expressed according to the LC-MS data, were subsequently selected for confirmation by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). (3) ResultsDifferential expression of four candidate biomarkers was confirmed by ELISA with decreased early pregnancy levels of gelsolin and fibulin-1 and increased levels of c-reactive protein and complement C5 in the preterm birth group. (4) ConclusionsThe confirmed candidate biomarkers are all to some extent related to inflammatory pathways and/or the complement system. This supports the hypothesis that both play a role in extreme and very preterm birth without any symptoms of preeclampsia and fetal growth restriction. The predictive value of complement C5, c-reactive protein, fibulin-1 and gelsolin should, therefore, be validated in another cohort with early pregnancy samples.

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