Scottish Daily Mail

Pre-eclampsia test that could save many lives

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

THOUSANDS of women could be spared pregnancy complicati­ons thanks to a new method of screening for pre-eclampsia.

A technique developed at King’s College London doubles the rate at which the problem is detected, a major study has revealed.

The screening programme, which uses data already gathered in the standard 12-week pregnancy check, could prevent nearly 3,000 cases of pre-eclampsia a year if it were rolled out on the NHS.

This could significan­tly reduce the number of babies and women killed or harmed by the condition each year, experts say.

Pre-eclampsia is one of the biggest threats to pregnant women and unborn babies, a leading cause of stillbirth and Britain’s second biggest cause of maternal death.

It is caused by reduced blood flow through the placenta, restrictin­g the flow of oxygen and nutrients to the baby.

It affects more than 25,000 women each year, striking in the second half of the pregnancy, and affects around 6 per cent of all UK pregnancie­s.

Severe cases of pre-eclampsia develop in 1 to 2 per cent of pregnancie­s, and in extreme cases can lead to seizures or death.

Giving women a low dose of aspirin every day cuts the risk by 70 per cent, but it must be given before 16 weeks of pregnancy.

Current NHS guidelines say women should be considered at risk of pre-eclampsia if their medical profile shows any one of a list of risk factors. But this ‘check-list’ approach only identifies 40 per cent of women with severe forms of pre-eclampsia – and only 24 per cent of women are given aspirin.

The King’s team found they could double this detection rate to 82 per cent with their new screening tool.

This technique takes medical history, blood pressure readings and the results of the ultrasound scan and blood test performed at the 12-week scan.

The data is entered into software, which instantly produces an accurate risk score.

The study, which involved 16,700 women at seven hospitals, found the screening could identify and prevent one case of pre-eclampsia for every 303 women screened.

If rolled out across the country and 900,000 pregnancie­s seen every year, that would mean nearly 3,000 cases of pre-eclampsia could be prevented.

Researcher Dr Liona Poon, whose findings are published in the Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology journal, called for the NHS to change its guidance to incorporat­e the screening.

She said it was ‘time to revise guidelines and to move away from a checklist method’.

‘Time to revise guidelines’

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