View clinical trials related to Pregnancy; Pre-eclampsia, Mild.
Filter by:Preeclampsia is an important disease that develops during pregnancy and it is one of the main contributors to maternal and fetal complications. The only known definitive treatment is delivery. Although delivery is always appropriate for the mother, it might not be the best for a very premature neonate. In cases of non-severe preeclampsia there no benefit delaying delivery beyond 37 weeks. It is also well established that before 34 weeks an expectant management confers perinatal benefit with minimum amount of additional maternal risk. There is then an area of uncertainty between 37 and 37 weeks. This is why in this period it is a clinical need to select high risk patients of complications that will benefit from labor induction, and differentiate them from low risk patients that can be manage expectantly until 37 weeks. Placental growth factor (PlGF) is an angiogenic factor that is lower in pregnant women with preeclampsia and current evidence shows that it as a predictor of adverse pregnancy outcome and requirement of delivery. Circulating levels of PIGF at 34 weeks could help to identify those women that may benefit from labor induction and those where delivery can be delayed until 37 weeks with low risk for maternal complications.