Department of Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA.
Department of Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA; Department of Biostatistics, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA; Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2022 Aug;227(2):290.e1-290.e21. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2022.03.012. Epub 2022 Mar 11.
Neonatal morbidity attributable to prematurity predominantly occurs among early preterm births (<32 weeks) rather than late preterm births (32 to <37 weeks). Methods to distinguish early and late preterm births are lacking given the heterogeneity in pathophysiology and risk factors, including maternal obesity. Although preterm births are often characterized by clinical presentation (spontaneous or clinically indicated), classifying deliveries by placental features detected on histopathology reports may help identify subgroups of preterm births with similar etiology and risk factors. Latent class analysis is an empirical approach to characterize preterm births on the basis of observed combinations of placental features.
To identify histopathologic markers that can distinguish early (<32 weeks) and late preterm births (32 to <37 weeks) that are also associated with maternal obesity and neonatal outcomes.
Women with a singleton preterm birth at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Magee-Womens Hospital (Pittsburgh, PA) from 2008 to 2012 and a placental evaluation (89% of preterm births) were stratified into early (n=900, 61% spontaneous) and late preterm births (n=3362, 57% spontaneous). Prepregnancy body mass index was self-reported at first prenatal visit and 16 abstracted placental features were analyzed. Placental subgroups (ie, latent classes) of early and late preterm births were determined separately by latent class analysis of placental features. The optimal number of latent classes was selected by comparing fit statistics. The probability of latent class membership across prepregnancy body mass indexes was estimated in early preterm births and in late preterm births by an extension of multinomial regression called pseudo-class regression, adjusting for race, smoking, education, and parity. The frequencies of severe neonatal morbidity (composite outcome: respiratory distress, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, intraventricular hemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis, periventricular leukomalacia, patent ductus arteriosus, and retinopathy of prematurity), small-for-gestational-age, and length of neonatal intensive care unit stay were compared across latent classes by chi-square and Kruskal-Wallis tests.
Early preterm births were grouped into 4 latent classes based on placental histopathologic features: acute inflammation (38% of cases), maternal vascular malperfusion with inflammation (29%), maternal vascular malperfusion (25%), and fetal vascular thrombosis with hemorrhage (8%). As body mass index increased from 20 to 50kg/m, the probability of maternal vascular malperfusion and fetal vascular thrombosis with hemorrhage increased, whereas the probability of maternal vascular malperfusion with inflammation decreased. There was minimal change in the probability of acute inflammation with increasing body mass index. Late preterm births also had 4 latent classes: maternal vascular malperfusion (22%), acute inflammation (12%), fetal vascular thrombosis with hemorrhage (9%), and low-risk pathology (58%). Body mass index was not associated with major changes in likelihood of the latent classes in late preterm births. Associations between body mass index and likelihood of the latent classes were not modified by type of delivery (spontaneous or indicated) in early or late preterm births. Maternal malperfusion and fetal vascular thrombosis with hemorrhage were associated with greater neonatal morbidity than the other latent classes in early and late preterm births.
Obesity may predispose women to early but not late preterm birth through placental vascular impairment. Latent class analysis of placental histopathologic data provides an evidence-based approach to group preterm births with shared underlying etiology and risk factors.
新生儿发病率归因于早产主要发生在早期早产(<32 周),而不是晚期早产(32 至<37 周)。鉴于早产的病理生理学和危险因素存在异质性,包括母体肥胖,因此缺乏区分早期和晚期早产的方法。虽然早产通常以临床表现(自发性或临床指征)为特征,但根据组织病理学报告中检测到的胎盘特征对分娩进行分类可能有助于确定具有相似病因和危险因素的早产亚组。潜在类别分析是一种基于观察到的胎盘特征组合来描述早产的经验方法。
确定可以区分早期(<32 周)和晚期早产(32 至<37 周)的组织病理学标志物,这些标志物也与母体肥胖和新生儿结局相关。
2008 年至 2012 年,在匹兹堡大学医学中心 Magee-Womens 医院(宾夕法尼亚州匹兹堡)接受单胎早产分娩且接受胎盘评估(89%的早产分娩)的女性被分层为早期(n=900,61%自发性)和晚期早产(n=3362,57%自发性)。在第一次产前就诊时,自我报告了孕前体重指数,分析了 16 个提取的胎盘特征。通过胎盘特征的潜在类别分析,分别确定了早期和晚期早产的胎盘亚组(即潜在类别)。通过比较拟合统计数据来选择最佳的潜在类别数量。通过扩展称为伪类回归的多变量回归,在早期早产和晚期早产中估计了孕前体重指数在潜在类别成员中的概率,该回归调整了种族、吸烟、教育和产次。通过卡方检验和 Kruskal-Wallis 检验比较了严重新生儿发病率(复合结局:呼吸窘迫、支气管肺发育不良、脑室内出血、坏死性小肠结肠炎、脑室周围白质软化、动脉导管未闭和早产儿视网膜病变)、小于胎龄儿和新生儿重症监护病房住院时间在潜在类别中的差异。
基于胎盘组织病理学特征,早期早产分为 4 个潜在类别:急性炎症(38%的病例)、伴炎症的母体血管灌注不良(29%)、母体血管灌注不良(25%)和胎儿血管血栓伴出血(8%)。随着体重指数从 20 增加到 50kg/m,伴炎症的母体血管灌注不良和胎儿血管血栓伴出血的概率增加,而伴炎症的母体血管灌注不良的概率降低。随着体重指数的增加,急性炎症的概率几乎没有变化。晚期早产也有 4 个潜在类别:母体血管灌注不良(22%)、急性炎症(12%)、胎儿血管血栓伴出血(9%)和低风险病理(58%)。体重指数与晚期早产中主要潜在类别变化之间没有关联。在早期或晚期早产中,体重指数与潜在类别之间的关联不受分娩类型(自发性或指征性)的影响。母体灌注不良和胎儿血管血栓伴出血与早期和晚期早产中其他潜在类别相比,与更大的新生儿发病率相关。
肥胖可能通过胎盘血管损伤使女性更容易发生早期早产,而不是晚期早产。胎盘组织病理学数据的潜在类别分析为基于共同潜在病因和危险因素对早产进行分组提供了一种基于证据的方法。