If verified and approved, the test could be the first to predict the future onset of preeclampsia early in pregnancy. This would give doctors time to reduce a patient’s risk of developing the condition, which affects one in 25 pregnancies in the United States.
“This is really shifting identification and the ability to intervene way to the left, way earlier in pregnancy,” Jonathan Cherry, the senior director of research operations at March of Dimes, an organization that supports advocacy, funding, and research around healthy pregnancies, told Verywell. March of Dimes contributed research to the Stanford study.
How Does An Early Detection Preeclampsia Test Work?
The Stanford researchers’ blood test examines a patient’s cell-free RNA (cfRNA) for the presence of 18 genes. The more genes present in the test results, the greater the risk of preeclampsia.
Preeclampsia typically occurs after 20 weeks into a pregnancy, but can also happen after a pregnancy.
With treatment, most pregnant people with preeclampsia deliver healthy babies.
Throughout a pregnancy, cfRNA levels can change in predictable ways that provide insight into the health of the fetus. By testing cfRNA levels in the blood, researchers can look for indicators of preeclampsia risk.
“When you get preeclampsia, you have issues with your brain, your liver, your placenta, your child,” Cherry said. “Cell-free RNA is one of these things that actually allows you to see further into what’s going on in multiple systems of the body through one isolate.”
The test can be administered as early as 5 weeks gestation and before symptoms occur. If and when the test comes to doctors’ offices, the goal is for it to eventually become part of standard practice for all or most pregnant patients, Cherry said.
Why It Matters
Although most people with preeclampsia will have healthy babies, the condition does fall under the category of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP), which are the leading causes of death among pregnant people in the United States.
Three out of five maternal deaths in the U.S. are considered preventable and are commonly associated with a missed or delayed diagnosis, according to the study researchers. Making a preeclampsia test part of the standard of care during early pregnancy could prevent diagnoses from being missed in the first place.
One of the reasons that preeclampsia diagnosis can be missed is because the disease presents differently in different people, and changes rapidly.
“It’s such a fascinating disease process, when you look at the pathophysiology of it, and also the presentation,” Jessica Shepherd, MD, a Texas-based OB-GYN and chief medical officer of Verywell Health, said on an Instagram live for Preeclampsia Awareness Month this week. “Sometimes, someone walks in, I examine them, and I’m like, ‘you have preeclampsia.’ And then you have people who you would never know have it.’”
Who Would Benefit From Early Testing Most?
According to the March of Dimes, high blood pressure, diabetes, kidney disease, autoimmune disease, and obesity place people at a higher risk for preeclampsia. Family history, age, and previous pregnancy complications can play a role, too.
Preeclampsia rates are about 60% higher in Black women than White women. Black women are more likely to have severe cases of the disease, according to a 2020 report by The Preeclampsia Foundation.
“If people in a high-risk group don’t get diagnosed early on, things get bad fast," Cherry said.
How to Reduce Your Risk of Preeclampsia
Experts say low-dose aspirin, good nutrition, and exercise may reduce the risks of preeclampsia.
Frequent check-ins with a doctor and understanding signs of preeclampsia are also crucial prevention measures, Zsakeba Henderson, MD, senior vice president and deputy chief medical and health officer at March of Dimes said during the Instagram live.
“It’s so important for people to know what the warning signs and symptoms are,” Henderson said. “Sometimes, there are things that patients experience and they may think it’s just a normal side effect of pregnancy.”
For example, swollen hands are not normal, she said.