Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine whether selective use of fetal fibronectin detection after ultrasound measurement of cervical length predicts preterm delivery in symptomatic patients better than ...Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine whether selective use of fetal fibronectin detection after ultrasound measurement of cervical length predicts preterm delivery in symptomatic patients better than either indicator alone. Study design: This prospective blinded study performed both tests on 359 women hospitalized for preterm labor between 18 and 34 completed weeks’gestation. The primary outcome was preterm delivery before 35 weeks’gestation. Results: Among the 359 women included, 48 (13.4%) delivered before 35 weeks’gestation. The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of cervical length ≤25 mm were 75%, 63%, 24%, and 94%, respectively, and of fetal fibronectin ≥50 ng/mL, 63%, 81%, 33%, and 93%. Fetal fibronectin detection was significantly (P < .001) more specific than cervical length measurement. For selective use of fetal fibronectin detection after cervical length measurement, the test was considered positive if cervical length was ≤15 mm or if cervical length was between 16 and 30 mm with fetal fibronectin ≥50 ng/mL. The predictive values of this test were not significantly different from those of fetal fibronectin detection (67%, 81%, 36%, and 94%). This strategy could have avoided 200 fibronectin tests. Conclusion: Selective use of fetal fibronectin detection after cervical length measurement is more specific than cervical length and as effective as fetal fibronectin assays in the entire population of women in preterm labor for predicting preterm birth.展开更多
文摘Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine whether selective use of fetal fibronectin detection after ultrasound measurement of cervical length predicts preterm delivery in symptomatic patients better than either indicator alone. Study design: This prospective blinded study performed both tests on 359 women hospitalized for preterm labor between 18 and 34 completed weeks’gestation. The primary outcome was preterm delivery before 35 weeks’gestation. Results: Among the 359 women included, 48 (13.4%) delivered before 35 weeks’gestation. The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of cervical length ≤25 mm were 75%, 63%, 24%, and 94%, respectively, and of fetal fibronectin ≥50 ng/mL, 63%, 81%, 33%, and 93%. Fetal fibronectin detection was significantly (P < .001) more specific than cervical length measurement. For selective use of fetal fibronectin detection after cervical length measurement, the test was considered positive if cervical length was ≤15 mm or if cervical length was between 16 and 30 mm with fetal fibronectin ≥50 ng/mL. The predictive values of this test were not significantly different from those of fetal fibronectin detection (67%, 81%, 36%, and 94%). This strategy could have avoided 200 fibronectin tests. Conclusion: Selective use of fetal fibronectin detection after cervical length measurement is more specific than cervical length and as effective as fetal fibronectin assays in the entire population of women in preterm labor for predicting preterm birth.