Salvianti et al. (2015) |
Hypermethylated RASSF1A |
8–17 |
Cutoff value of 7.49 GE/ml in cffDNA concentration with 100% sensitivity and 50% specificity |
Papantoniou et al. (2013) |
Hypermethylated RASSF1A |
11–13 |
Cutoff value of 512 GE/ml in cffDNA values with specificity and sensitivity of 100% |
Poon et al. (2013) |
Chromosome selective sequencing of single nucleotide polymorphic and nonpolymorphic loci |
11–13 |
No significant difference in values between pre-eclampsia cases and normal |
Yu et al. (2013) |
SRY |
15–20 (18) |
Cutoff value (logged) of 2.62 with a sensitivity of 90% and specificity of 85% for early-onset pre-eclampsia |
Kim et al. (2012) |
Hypermethylated RASSF1A |
15–28 |
3.3-fold increase in cffDNA concentration |
Sifakis et al. (2009) |
DYS |
11–13 |
Significant increase in cffDNA only in early-onset pre-eclampsia (95.5 vs 51.5 GE/ml) and not in late-onset group |
Gozdziewicz et al. (2009) |
SRY |
15–22 (18) |
Significant increase in cffDNA values (3.2 vs 0.595 GE/ml) |
Crowley et al. (2007) |
SRY |
10–20 (13.5) |
No significant increase in cffDNA before 20 weeks (30.5 vs 27.5 GE/ml) |
Cotter et al. (2005) |
RhD |
9–22 (15.3) |
Fourfold increase risk of disease development for tenfold increase of copies/ml |
Levine et al. (2004) |
DYS |
17–28 |
Increase but not significant in 17–24 weeks and significant rise from 24 to 28 weeks |
Cotter et al. (2004) |
SRY |
15.7 ± 3.6 |
Increase in cffDNA is associated with 8-fold risk of disease development |
Farina et al. (2004) |
DYS |
20 ± 2.08 |
2.39-fold increase of cffDNA in low-risk population |
Zhong et al. (2002) |
SRY |
19–24 (21.0) |
Significant increase with 422.9 vs 128.5 copies/ml |
Leung et al. (2001) |
SRY |
11–22 (17) |
Significant increase with 41.9 vs 22.0 GE/ml |