Preeclampsia
What's New
Last Posted: Mar 18, 2024
- Researchers one step closer to preventing preeclampsia
Medical XPress, APA, March 14, 2024 - Prediction of pregnancy-related complications in women undergoing assisted reproduction, using machine learning methods.
Chen Wang et al. Fertil Steril 2024 - Predicting preterm birth using auto-ML frameworks: a large observational study using electronic inpatient discharge data.
Deming Kong et al. Front Pediatr 2024 121330420 - Recruiting and retaining nulliparous individuals with a family history of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy to participate in scientific research prior to pregnancy: The Sisterhood Study.
Natalie A Cameron et al. Am Heart J Plus 2024 34 - Deep Survival Analysis for Interpretable Time-Varying Prediction of Preeclampsia Risk.
Braden W Eberhard et al. medRxiv 2024 - Genetic contributions to risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes.
Zachary H Hughes et al. Curr Cardiovasc Risk Rep 2024 17(11) 185-193 - Mediating Factors in the Association of Maternal Educational Level With Pregnancy Outcomes: A Mendelian Randomization Study.
Tormod Rogne et al. JAMA Netw Open 2024 1 (1) e2351166 - Predicting preterm birth using explainable machine learning in a prospective cohort of nulliparous and multiparous pregnant women.
Wasif Khan et al. PLoS One 2023 18(12) e0293925 - Cord blood DNA methylation signatures associated with preeclampsia are enriched for cardiovascular pathways: insights from the VDAART trial.
Hanna M Knihtilä et al. EBioMedicine 2023 11 104890 - Pregnant and Living with Sickle Cell Disease: A Push for Better Outcomes
NIH, September 2023 - Experts say Found’s story highlights the extraordinary complexity of the problem for pregnant people living with SCD – and the critical importance of receiving proper, specialized care as early as possible. This is especially true now that medical advances in care and disease-modifying therapies have helped many people living with SCD survive well through their reproductive years. For parents-to-be, that means awareness is key. Individuals with SCD are at higher risk than the general population for preeclampsia, as Found discovered; but those with preeclampsia can go on to develop a condition called eclampsia, which can lead to seizures and even coma. People with SCD are also at higher risk for sepsis and blood clots. And there are risks for the fetus, such as lower-than-normal growth in the womb, preterm delivery, and stillbirth.
K Miller, Self, September 2023 - An Interpretable Longitudinal Preeclampsia Risk Prediction Using Machine Learning.
Braden W Eberhard et al. medRxiv 2023 - Cell-free DNA methylome analysis for early preeclampsia prediction
M de Borre et al, Nature Medicine, August 28, 2023 - Using the methylome to predict pre-eclampsia
Tu’uhevaha J. Kaitu’u-Lino et al, Nature Medicine, August 28, 2023 - Transforming preeclampsia diagnosis: The promising role of cfRNA
News Medical, August 15, 2023 - Polygenic prediction of preeclampsia and gestational hypertension.
Michael C Honigberg et al. Nat Med 2023 5 - Obstetrical, perinatal and genetic outcomes associated with non-reportable prenatal cell free DNA screening results.
Mary E Norton et al. American journal of obstetrics and gynecology 2023 - Analysis of Pregnancy Complications and Epigenetic Gestational Age of Newborns
CL Acosta et al, JAMA Network Open, February 24, 2023 - Association of Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy With Future Cardiovascular Disease.
Bilal Rayes et al. JAMA network open 2023 6(2) e230034 - Development and validation of the prediction models for preeclampsia: a retrospective, single-center, case-control study.
Chen Xuhong et al. Annals of translational medicine 2022 10(22) 1221
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About RCH PHGKB
Reproductive and Child Health PHGKB is an online, continuously updated, searchable database of published scientific literature, CDC and NIH resources, and other materials that address the translation of genomic and other precision health discoveries into improved health care and prevention related to reproductive and child Health...more
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Disclaimer: Articles listed in the Public Health Knowledge Base are selected by Public Health Genomics Branch to provide current awareness of the literature and news. Inclusion in the update does not necessarily represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention nor does it imply endorsement of the article's methods or findings. CDC and DHHS assume no responsibility for the factual accuracy of the items presented. The selection, omission, or content of items does not imply any endorsement or other position taken by CDC or DHHS. Opinion, findings and conclusions expressed by the original authors of items included in the update, or persons quoted therein, are strictly their own and are in no way meant to represent the opinion or views of CDC or DHHS. References to publications, news sources, and non-CDC Websites are provided solely for informational purposes and do not imply endorsement by CDC or DHHS.
- Page last reviewed:Feb 1, 2024
- Page last updated:Mar 27, 2024
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