Pregnancy-specific reference intervals for C-reactive protein improve
diagnostic accuracy for infection: a cross-sectional and diagnostic
accuracy study
Abstract
Objective To define a trimester-specific reference interval for
C-reactive protein (CRP) in healthy pregnant women, and to evaluate its
accuracy for diagnosing infection. Design Retrospective cross-sectional
and diagnostic accuracy study. Setting Tertiary hospital in Oxford, UK.
Population Development cohort: 315 pregnant women from the Oxford
Pregnancy Biobank with uncomplicated pregnancies, with longitudinal
sampling in each trimester. Evaluation cohort: 50 pregnant women with
suspected chorioamnionitis. Methods and main outcome measures We
calculated a 95% reference interval for CRP in each trimester and
evaluated its diagnostic accuracy for infection compared to that from
current guidance (≤7 mg/L). Results Of the 315 healthy pregnant women in
our study, concentrations of CRP were substantially higher than those in
most non-pregnant populations. The reference intervals in each trimester
were similar, with an upper reference limit of 18 mg/L. CRP increased
log-linearly with body mass index in all trimesters (p<0.001).
The sensitivity and specificity of CRP for diagnosing chorioamnionitis
were 80% and 86%, respectively. The overall diagnostic accuracy using
the pregnancy-specific reference interval was significantly greater than
that of the existing standard (p=0.002). Conclusions A
pregnancy-specific reference interval for CRP should be used to optimise
diagnostic accuracy for infection in pregnant women. Chorioamnionitis
was used as example of a localised infection with well-defined outcomes,
but pregnancy-specific upper reference limits for CRP should be
considered in any clinical setting including pregnant women.