• Glycosylated fibronectin was evaluated in hypertensive pregnancies in Sierra Leone. • It showed high sensitivity for maternal death and eclampsia. • It could serve as a cheap risk-stratification tool in settings where resources are limited. To evaluate the test accuracy of glycosylated fibronectin (GlyFn) to predict adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes in women with hypertensive pregnancies in a low resourced setting. Prospective observational study at a Tertiary government hospital in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Hypertensive women between 24 – 36 + 6 weeks’ gestation were recruited and Point-of-care GlyFn test was performed at time of recruitment. Diagnostic accuracy measures for adverse maternal (maternal death and eclampsia) and neonatal (stillbirth, neonatal death and termination pre-viability) outcomes including sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV), were calculated for predefined GlyFn thresholds using STATA. Complete outcome data was available for 172 women. 11.6% (20/172) of women had a composite maternal outcome with 16 cases of eclampsia and eight maternal deaths. For the composite maternal outcome and stillbirth, GlyFn had a 100% sensitivity and NPV when taken before 34 weeks’ gestation. GlyFn also showed good time to delivery prediction when taken before 34 week gestation (AUROC: 0.69, 0.56 – 0.81) and good predictive performance for placental abruption (AUROC: 0.82, 0.75–0.88) and small-for-gestational-age babies (below the 3rd centile) (AUROC: 0.71, 0.54–0.87). In low-resource settings, GlyFn could serve as a risk-stratification tool for severe maternal and neonatal complications in women presenting with hypertension in low-resource settings.
Martin et al. (Wed,) studied this question.