Exploring free pregnancy associated plasma protein a (fPAPP-A) as a biomarker in early pregnancy
: Petersen, Jesper Friis; Tiittanen, Vilma; Wittfooth, Saara; Løkkegaard, Ellen; Friis-Hansen, Lennart Jan
Publisher: Elsevier BV
: 2024
: Practical Laboratory Medicine
: Practical Laboratory Medicine
: e00428
: 42
: 2352-5517
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plabm.2024.e00428
: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.plabm.2024.e00428
: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/458899518
Objectives: In combined first trimester screening for Down syndrome, Pregnancy-Associated Plasma Protein A (PAPP-A) is pivotal. PAPP-A tests evaluate total PAPP-A, consisting of the biologically active free PAPP-A (fPAPP-A) and PAPP-A complexed with eosinophil major basic protein's proform (proMBP). While PAPP-A is well-researched, limited understanding persists regarding fPAPP-A's first trimester concentrations and diagnostic utility.
Design and methods: PAPP-A and fPAPP-A levels were gauged in 602 serum samples at 2-week intervals (gestational weeks 4–14) from 159 women with delivery of a healthy neonate and 80 samples from 37 miscarriages. The final sample at the time of diagnosis from women who miscarried was included in analyses.
Results: During the first trimester, PAPP-A and fPAPP-A levels displayed significant and strong correlation (r = 0.94), with median values doubling weekly. Free PAPP-A constituted only 3.0 % of PAPP-A over gestational weeks. Low fPAPP-A linked to miscarriage (p < 0.001), maternal weight (p < 0.001), and smoking (p = 0.02). For miscarriage prediction fPAPP-A was equal to PAPP-A (area under the receiver operating characteristics curve 0.79 vs. 0.81, p = 0.44).
Conclusions: Investigating fPAPP-A presence and concentration directly in first trimester serum has not been done previously. This study report lower fPAPP-A values than anticipated from prior enzymatic studies of fPAPP-A. fPAPP-A was not superior to PAPP-A as a first trimester biomarker in this dataset.
:
The PEP cohort was funded by generous grants from the North Zealand Hospital Research Council, the Gangsted Foundation, the Foundation for Development of Danish Private Practice, the Tvergaard Foundation, the AP Møller Foundation, the Foundation from Danish Doctors Pension, Copenhagen University and the Danish Southern and Zealand Region. No funders were involved in the design, acquisition, analyses, or interpretation of data prior to submission.