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A method of screening for ectopic pregnancy and its indications.
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1981
Year
FertilityHuman Chorionic GonadotropinReproductive HealthGynecologyHigh-risk PregnancyMiscarriage TestingHcg ValuesObstetricsPublic HealthInfertilityMaternal HealthPrenatal DiagnosisMaternal-fetal MedicineLower LimitEndocrinologyPrenatal TestingAbortionPediatricsMedicineEctopic Pregnancy
The study examined whether the lower limit of hCG rise rate could differentiate normal intrauterine from ectopic pregnancies. The method uses the percent increase in hCG over 48 hours, calculated from two samples, with a threshold of 66 % to indicate normal pregnancy. The test misclassifies 15 % of normal pregnancies as abnormal and delays diagnosis in 13 % of ectopic pregnancies beyond 48 hours.
The possibility of distinguishing between normal intrauterine and ectopic pregnancies by determining the lower limit of the rate of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) increased in early pregnancy was investigated. This can be expressed as the slope of the log hCG-time curve or as the percent increase in hCG over a given sampling interval. For practical purposes, the rate is most easily determined from 2 samples drawn 48 hours apart. The differences between the 2 hCG values obtained is expressed as a percentage of the initial value, and should be 66% or greater for this sampling interval. Approximately 15% of normal intrauterine pregnancies screened in this way will appear abnormal, and the diagnosis in 13% of ectopic pregnancies will be delayed beyond 48 hours.