The Daily Telegraph

Blood test can predict the start of labour

Scientists detect changes within pregnant women as their bodies prepare for the process of giving birth

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR Science Translatio­nal Medicine.

A blood test which can predict when a woman will go into labour by monitoring changes in her body as it gets ready for birth could be available within three years, scientists have said. Scientists at California’s Stanford University discovered that the body enters a pre-labour phase around three weeks before the birth, and this can be spotted through changes in the blood. It could make for more accurate indication­s than rough due dates for when births will take place.

A BLOOD test which can predict when a woman will go into labour by monitoring changes in the body as it gets ready for the birth could be available within three years, scientists have said.

Currently pregnant women are given a rough due date, based on counting 40 weeks from the first day of the last menstrual cycle and looking at the baby’s size using an ultrasound. However babies are rarely on schedule, with most coming three weeks before or two weeks after the due date.

Now scientists at California’s Stanford University have discovered that the body enters a pre-labour phase around three weeks before the birth, and this can be spotted through changes in the blood. In preparatio­n for delivery, the scientists found that pregnant women begin producing more clotting factors which help stop blood loss after birth.

Blood vessel formation also decreases as the connection between the placenta and the womb weakens.

They also detected a surge in the pregnancy hormone progestero­ne and the stress hormone cortisol, as well as a rise in placental proteins and proteins that prevent inflammati­on.

All the signs can be spotted in the blood, and taken together, are a sign that pre-labour has begun and the birth is not far away, say scientists.

“The mother’s body and physiology start to change about three weeks before the actual onset of labour,” said co-author Dr Virginia Winn, associate professor of obstetrics and gynaecolog­y at Stanford. “It’s not a single switch; there is this preparatio­n that the body has to go through.”

The shift from ongoing pregnancy to the pre-labour phase was detected both in women who had fullterm pregnancie­s and those who delivered prematurel­y.

The scientists hope to have a blood test available within the next two to three years, which could help plan deliveries more accurately, and help doctors know when it is safe to induce labour, or administer steroids to improve lung function for pre-term babies. The method narrows the predicted delivery time to a two-week window, but researcher­s expect it will become even more precise as the technique is refined.

“Clinicians are good at estimating gestationa­l age, which measures the developmen­t of the foetus,” said Dr Brice Gaudillier­e, the study’s senior author and associate professor of anaesthesi­ology, perioperat­ive and pain medicine.

“But there is a disconnect between this timing and when labour starts, because whether the baby is ready is only one factor in the onset of labour. The other part of the equation is the mother.”

The study followed 63 women through the last 100 days of their pregnancie­s. They gave blood samples for analysis two to three times before delivery. Each sample was analysed for 7,142 metabolic, protein and single-cell immune features.

Scientists said they were particular­ly interested to find that an anti-inflammato­ry protein appeared to play a role in the impending birth.

“The hypothesis has been that labour is an inflammato­ry reaction, and yes, there are signs of that, but we also found that aspects of this inflammati­on are toned down before labour starts, which we think may prepare the mother’s immune system for the next phase, when the baby is born and healing and immune resolution begins,” added Dr Gaudillier­e. “It needs to be a regulated process.”

Researcher­s are now planning to validate the findings in more pregnant women and narrow the number of biological markers needed to predict labour onset. Dr Winn added. “If we understand what’s regulating labour, we might be able to do a better job of inducing labour.”

The research was published in the journal

‘If we understand what’s regulating labour, we might be able to do a better job of inducing labour’

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