Predicting Preterm Birth

Virginia Commonwealth University Background
Preterm birth (PTB) is the second-leading cause of neonatal mortality worldwide and the leading cause of infant mortality in middle- and high-income societies. In the United States alone the annual cost of PTB is greater than $26.2 billion. Effects of PTB can also have long-term impacts on the individual. The current prediction methods are limited to individual history of preterm birth, which is of little help to first-time mothers, or clinical observations throughout pregnancy. There is a need to develop models for the prediction of PTB in early stages of pregnancy to enable appropriate intervention and prophylaxis to reduce the risk of premature delivery.
Technology Overview
Researchers at VCU have developed a model for PTB prediction based on the relative abundances of several bacterial taxa in the vaginal microbiome. Of 1572 pregnancies from the National Institutes of Health’s integrative Human Microbiome Project (iHMP)longitudinal study, analysis of vaginal samples from 45 women experiencing spontaneous PTB and 90 case-matched controls of predominantly African ancestry identified 12 bacterial taxa with significant associations to PTB. The presence of Lachnospiraceae BVAB1, Prevotella cluster 2, Sneathia amnii and Saccharibacteria TM7-H1 in particular, which are also correlated with vaginal dysbiosis and positively correlated with the incidence of PTB, make up the variables in this PTB prediction algorithm. The model shows promising sensitivity (77.4 %) and specificity (76.3 %), thereby providing a clinically relevant approach to predicting PTB early in pregnancy to permit medical intervention ().
Publications:

Fettweis, J.M., et al. 2019 ‑ The vaginal microbiome and preterm birth

Benefits

Early stage-pregnancy vagitype assessment
Non-invasive sample collection and can be performed by patient
Higher sensitivity and specificity over models including only clinical variables
Modifiable mode

Applications

Predicting risk of preterm birth
Early intervention to enhance health of mother and child during pregnancy

Opportunity
This technology is available for licensing to industry for further development and commercialization.
VCU ID #18-011

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