Aim: To analyze the role of maternal placental growth factor (PlGF) in the prediction of small for gestational age (SGA) birth weight in pregnancy complicated by type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM).
Methods: A prospective observational study on 59 normotensive T1DM pregnant women, assessing maternal PlGF concentrations between the 10th-14th and 22nd-25th weeks of gestation.
Results: Number of SGA vs. non-SGA newborns was 11 (18.6%) vs. 48 (81.4%), respectively. First trimester PlGF serum concentrations (pg/mL) were similar between SGA vs. non-SGA groups [data given as median (interquartile range)]: 65.5 (35.58-159.20) vs. 68.23 (11.59-150.03), respectively; P=0.44. A trend for lower PlGF concentrations was observed in the second trimester in the SGA vs. non-SGA group: 63.34 (12.79-119.16) vs. 116.75 (33.93-235.82); P=0.07. In the SGA group, PlGF concentrations did not differ between the first and the second trimester: 65.5 (35.58-159.20) vs. 63.34 (12.79-119.16), respectively; P=0.36. In the non-SGA group, PlGF concentrations were significantly higher at the gestational age of 22-25 weeks compared to 10-14 weeks [116.75 (33.93-235.82) vs. 68.23 (11.59-150.03); P=0.03).
Conclusions: Decreased PlGF serum concentration in mid-pregnancy, as well as a lack of physiological increase in PlGF levels between early and mid-gestation, may precede development of SGA in women with T1DM.