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Serum D-dimer is not predictive of placenta-mediated complications in pregnancy at high risk: The multicentric prospective cohort AngioPred study.

Agathe HovineCéline ChauleurChristophe GaultFlorence RanconJean-Christophe GrisBrigitte TardyAntoine GiraudTiphaine Raia-Barjat
Published in: Frontiers in cell and developmental biology (2023)
Background: The theory that D-dimer level might has a predictive or diagnostic role in preeclampsia needs to be explored. Aim of the study was to evaluate the association between serum D-dimer level and the occurrence of placenta-mediated complications (PMC) in a pregnant population at high risk. Methods: A prospective multicenter cohort study including 200 pregnant women was conducted. Results: Serum D-dimer increases throughout pregnancy, with the highest levels at the end of gestation. Serum D-dimer level was similar for women with PMC and with no complication. Serum D-dimer level was not different in women with preeclampsia versus uncomplicated women. Serum D-dimer level was not different in women with early or late preeclampsia versus uncomplicated women. Conclusion: This result suggests that serum D-dimer level was not predictive of the PMC occurrence. This corroborates the fact that the origin of PMC based more on immunity than in hemostasis.
Keyphrases
  • pregnant women
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • early onset
  • risk assessment
  • risk factors
  • type diabetes
  • preterm infants
  • clinical trial
  • preterm birth
  • adipose tissue