Premature Labour -
Introduction
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Obstet Gynecol. 1996 May;87(5 Pt 1):643-8.
The preterm prediction study: fetal fibronectin testing and spontaneous
preterm birth. NICHD Maternal Fetal Medicine Units Network.
Goldenberg RL, Mercer BM, Meis PJ, Copper RL, Das A, McNellis D.
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
Maternal Fetal Medicine Units Network, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Objectives:
To evaluate the presence of fetal fibronectin in the cervix
and vagina as a screening test for spontaneous preterm birth.
Methods:
Two thousand nine hundred twenty-nine women at ten centers were
routinely screened every 2 weeks from 22-24 to 30 weeks for cervical and
vaginal fetal fibronectin. A positive test was defined as a value equal
to or greater than 50 ng/mL. The relation between a positive test at
four gestational ages and spontaneous preterm birth at various intervals
after the test was determined.
Results:
In each testing period, 3-4% of
the fetal fibronectin tests were positive. The correlation between
cervical and vaginal fetal fibronectin at the same visit was always
approximately 0.7 (P < .001), and that between cervical or vaginal fetal
fibronectin in consecutive visits was between 0.17 and 0.25 (P < .001).
The sensitivity of fetal fibronectin at 22-24 weeks to predict
spontaneous preterm birth at less than 28 weeks was 0.63, and the
relative risk for a positive versus negative test was 59. The
specificity was always 96-98%, whereas the positive predictive value
rose from 13% to 36% as the upper limit of the definition of preterm
birth was increased from less than 28 to less than 37 weeks. The
relative risk for spontaneous preterm birth after a positive fetal
fibronectin test compared with a negative fetal fibronectin test varied
substantially by testing period and by the definition of spontaneous
preterm birth, but always remained greater than 4 and statistically
significant.
Conclusion:
A positive cervical or vaginal fetal
fibronectin test at 22-24 weeks predicted more than half of the
spontaneous preterm births at less than 28 weeks (sensitivity 0.63). As
the definition of spontaneous preterm birth was extended to include
later gestational ages or when the fetal fibronectin test was performed
later in pregnancy, the level of association between a positive fetal
fibronectin test and spontaneous preterm birth, while remaining highly
significant, tended to decrease. Although fetal fibronectin is an
excellent test for predicting spontaneous preterm birth, we present no
evidence that the use of this test will result in a reduction in
spontaneous preterm birth.