Unit Converter
PlGF – Placental growth factor

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Key Angiogenic Biomarker for Preeclampsia Screening, Diagnosis & Placental Dysfunction)

Synonyms

  • Placental Growth Factor
  • PlGF
  • Placenta-derived growth factor
  • Angiogenic factor
  • VEGF family member (VEGF-B)

Units of Measurement

  • pg/mL
  • pg/dL
  • pg/100 mL
  • pg%
  • pg/L
  • ng/L

Molecular Weight

~20–25 kDa (glycosylated dimeric protein)

Unit Conversions

Direct mass conversions

1 pg/mL=1000 pg/L1\ \text{pg/mL} = 1000\ \text{pg/L}1 pg/mL=1000 pg/L 1 pg/mL=100 pg/dL1\ \text{pg/mL} = 100\ \text{pg/dL}1 pg/mL=100 pg/dL

ng/L

1 ng/L=1 pg/mL1\ \text{ng/L} = 1\ \text{pg/mL}1 ng/L=1 pg/mL

pg%

\text{pg%} = \text{pg/dL}

Description

Placental Growth Factor (PlGF) is a proangiogenic protein produced primarily by:

  • Trophoblasts (syncytiotrophoblasts)
  • Placental endothelial cells

It plays a fundamental role in:

  • Placental vascular development
  • Uteroplacental blood flow
  • Implantation
  • Fetal growth

During normal pregnancy:

  • PlGF rises sharply from 11–34 weeks,
  • Peaks at ~28–30 weeks,
  • Declines near term.

In preeclampsia, PlGF is markedly decreased.

Physiological Role

  • Promotes angiogenesis
  • Enhances vascular remodeling
  • Supports placental perfusion
  • Counterbalances anti-angiogenic proteins like sFlt-1 (soluble Fms-like tyrosine kinase 1)

PlGF is a central marker of placental function.

Clinical Significance

LOW PlGF (Most Important Finding)

Strongly associated with:

  • Preeclampsia (early or late onset)
  • Placental insufficiency
  • Fetal growth restriction (FGR/ IUGR)
  • Preterm birth due to placental disease
  • Stillbirth risk
  • Placental abruption

Low PlGF indicates anti-angiogenic imbalance, typically with high sFlt-1/PlGF ratio.

Cutoffs Used Clinically (FMF, FIGO, ACOG)

  • PlGF < 100 pg/mL → high suspicion of preeclampsia
  • PlGF < 12 pg/mL → highly specific for early-onset preeclampsia
  • PlGF < 5th percentile for gestation → indicates placental dysfunction
  • sFlt-1/PlGF ratio > 38 → predicts preeclampsia within 1 week

HIGH PlGF

Usually normal in healthy pregnancies.
Mildly elevated in:

  • Multiple gestation (twins)
  • Molar pregnancy
  • High placental volume
  • Normal late pregnancy (physiologic peak)

High PlGF is not clinically problematic.

Reference Intervals

PlGF Levels by Gestational Age

GestationReference Range (pg/mL)
11–14 weeks20 – 150
15–19 weeks50 – 300
20–23 weeks100 – 600
24–28 weeks150 – 1000
29–33 weeks150 – 700
34–36 weeks100 – 400
>37 weeks50 – 200

Important: Interpretation must use MoM (multiples of median) adjusted for gestational week.

Critical Values

  • PlGF < 100 pg/mL at 20–34 weeks → strong predictor of preeclampsia
  • PlGF < 12 pg/mL → very high risk of early severe PE

Diagnostic Uses

1. Preeclampsia Diagnosis (Major Use)

PlGF is used with:

  • sFlt-1
  • Uterine artery Doppler
  • Mean arterial pressure

2. Rule-Out Test (Highly Valuable)

  • Normal/high PlGF + low sFlt-1/PlGF ratio reliably rules out preeclampsia for 1–2 weeks.

3. Fetal Growth Restriction (FGR/IUGR)

Low PlGF correlates with:

  • Placental insufficiency
  • Abnormal Dopplers
  • Preterm delivery risk

4. First Trimester Screening

Part of FMF preeclampsia predictive algorithm.

5. High-Risk Pregnancy Monitoring

Used in:

  • Chronic hypertension
  • Diabetes
  • CKD
  • Autoimmune disease
  • Previous PE/FGR history

Analytical Notes

  • Serum or EDTA plasma acceptable
  • Homogeneous immunoassays and automated platforms available
  • Hemolysis can falsely raise or lower PlGF depending on method
  • Levels highly gestation-dependent - always reference gestational MoM
  • Process sample promptly; freeze if delayed

Clinical Pearls

  • Low PlGF is a strong early marker of placental dysfunction before clinical symptoms.
  • sFlt-1/PlGF ratio is often more informative than PlGF alone.
  • Normal PlGF essentially rules out preeclampsia for the next week (very high negative predictive value).
  • PlGF levels are naturally lower in late pregnancy, so interpretation must be gestation-specific.
  • Multiple gestation → higher baseline PlGF.

Interesting Fact

PlGF is part of the VEGF family, yet unlike VEGF-A, it acts almost exclusively on the placenta, making it an exceptionally specific biomarker for pregnancy-related vascular disorders.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Placental Biomarkers
  2. FIGO & ISUOG Preeclampsia Guidelines
  3. Fetal Medicine Foundation (FMF) - PlGF Algorithms
  4. ACOG Practice Bulletin - Gestational Hypertension & Preeclampsia
  5. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - PlGF
  6. ARUP Consult - Maternal-Fetal Biomarkers
  7. NIH / MedlinePlus - Placental Growth Factor Test

Last updated: January 27, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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