Abstract

Serum levels of pregnancy-associated plasma protein A (PAPP-A), human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), and pregnancy-specific beta 1-glycoprotein (SP1) were measured in 21 women after successful in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer. Of the 21 pregnancies, 14, including 1 twin gestation, progressed successfully to term. The remaining seven, composed of tubal (n = 3), anembryonic (n = 1), and spontaneously aborted (n = 3) pregnancies, failed during the first half of pregnancy. Placental protein measurement was of no diagnostic value in the detection of anembryonic pregnancy. Similarly, measurement of hCG and SP1 could not readily distinguish tubal ectopic from normal intrauterine pregnancies. By contrast, the predictive value (38.9%) of a depressed PAPP-A level in conjunction with superior diagnostic sensitivity (70%) and relative risk factor (23.6) proved to be of greater diagnostic value in this potentially lethal condition. In the absence of ultrasonography, the biochemical diagnostic indices were comparable in the prediction of spontaneous abortion. However, in the presence of a live fetus, PAPP-A levels were consistently depressed (sensitivity, 91.7%) many weeks before pregnancy demise. The relative risk factor of depressed PAPP-A levels was 29 times greater than the risk associated with a depressed hCG level. These findings further demonstrate the potential diagnostic value of PAPP-A measurement for monitoring postimplantation embryo viability.

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