PLoS Medicine (Jan 2007)

Proteomic profiling of the amniotic fluid to detect inflammation, infection, and neonatal sepsis.

  • Catalin S Buhimschi,
  • Vineet Bhandari,
  • Benjamin D Hamar,
  • Mert-Ozan Bahtiyar,
  • Guomao Zhao,
  • Anna K Sfakianaki,
  • Christian M Pettker,
  • Lissa Magloire,
  • Edmund Funai,
  • Errol R Norwitz,
  • Michael Paidas,
  • Joshua A Copel,
  • Carl P Weiner,
  • Charles J Lockwood,
  • Irina A Buhimschi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0040018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
p. e18

Abstract

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Proteomic analysis of amniotic fluid shows the presence of biomarkers characteristic of intrauterine inflammation. We sought to validate prospectively the clinical utility of one such proteomic profile, the Mass Restricted (MR) score.We enrolled 169 consecutive women with singleton pregnancies admitted with preterm labor or preterm premature rupture of membranes. All women had a clinically indicated amniocentesis to rule out intra-amniotic infection. A proteomic fingerprint (MR score) was generated from fresh samples of amniotic fluid using surface-enhanced laser desorption ionization (SELDI) mass spectrometry. Presence or absence of the biomarkers of the MR score was interpreted in relationship to the amniocentesis-to-delivery interval, placental inflammation, and early-onset neonatal sepsis for all neonates admitted to the Newborn Special Care Unit (n = 104). Women with "severe" amniotic fluid inflammation (MR score of 3 or 4) had shorter amniocentesis-to-delivery intervals than women with "no" (MR score of 0) inflammation or even "minimal" (MR score of 1 or 2) inflammation (median [range] MR 3-4: 0.4 d [0.0-49.6 d] versus MR 1-2: 3.8 d [0.0-151.2 d] versus MR 0: 17.0 d [0.1-94.3 d], p 100 cells/mm3), whereas the combination of Gram stain and MR score was best for rapid prediction of intra-amniotic infection (positive amniotic fluid culture).High MR scores are associated with preterm delivery, histological chorioamnionitis, and early-onset neonatal sepsis. In this study, proteomic analysis of amniotic fluid was shown to be the most accurate test for diagnosis of intra-amniotic inflammation, whereas addition of the MR score to the Gram stain provides the best combination of tests to rapidly predict infection.