PREDICTION OF PREECLAMPSIA RISK USING CIRCULATING CELL-FREE RNA
Researchers at Stanford and the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub have developed methods for predicting the risk or existence of preeclampsia.
Preeclampsia, a multi-organ syndrome diagnosed after 20 weeks of gestation, is associated with an increase in adverse maternal and perinatal outcomes. Detection and diagnosis can prove challenging, as early signs of preeclampsia (PE) can be easily confused with general pregnancy discomfort or other gestational complications. There is an unmet clinical need for high-quality predictive tests for PE early in gestation (<16 weeks) to guide prophylactic use of potential therapeutics and improve obstetric care. Liquid biopsies that measure circulating, cell-free RNA (cfRNA) offer the ability to noninvasively study the development of pregnancy-related complications, like preeclampsia.
Stage of Research
The inventors have developed a method of diagnosing or evaluating risk of preeclampsia by quantifying levels of cfRNA from a biological sample in a pregnant subject. To develop this method, the inventors conducted a prospective clinical study to identify a predictive signature of transcriptomic changes across gestation. Specifically, the inventors isolated and analyzed cfRNA to identify a panel of differentially expressed genes that segregate PE and control samples across gestation, agree with known PE biology, and together provide a risk score for PE.
Applications
Advantages
Stage of Development
Research – in vitro
Publications
Moufarrej MN, Wong RJ, Campos AA, et al. Early prediction of preeclampsia in pregnancy with circulating, cell-free RNA. medRxiv. 2021. Doi: 10.1101/2021.03.11.21253393
Related Web Links
https://quakelab.stanford.edu
Keywords
cfRNA, Diagnosis, Gestational age, maternal blood, maternal plasma, machine learning
Reference
CZB-202S, Stanford S21-061