# The Prognostic Value and Perioperative Dynamics of the HALP Score in Placenta Accreta Spectrum Surgeries

**Authors:** Tuğçe Arslanoğlu, Sezin Uludağ, Oğuzhan Yürük, Hale Çetin Arslan, Pakize Özge Karkin, Seda Atak, Nuran Tamtürk, Serap Adıyaman, Deniz Kanber Açar, Alev Atış Aydın

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14217781 · 2025-11-02

## TL;DR

This study shows that the HALP score, usually a sign of good health, is linked to worse outcomes in surgeries for placenta accreta, suggesting it reflects placental severity rather than maternal condition.

## Contribution

The study introduces HALP as a novel, low-cost marker for placental invasiveness and surgical risk in placenta accreta.

## Key findings

- Higher preoperative HALP scores were associated with increased maternal complications.
- HALP showed a biphasic pattern, rising 6 hours post-surgery and then declining.
- Elevated HALP was linked to lower birthweight and reduced Apgar scores in newborns.

## Abstract

Objective: We aimed to evaluate the prognostic value of the hemoglobin, albumin, lymphocyte, and platelet (HALP) score in placenta accreta spectrum (PAS) surgeries and its perioperative dynamics as a marker of surgical and neonatal outcomes. Methods: This retrospective cohort included 100 patients with histopathologically confirmed PAS who underwent cesarean hysterectomy (2016–2025). The HALP was calculated within 24 h before delivery and reassessed at 6 and 24 h after delivery. Demographic, surgical, and neonatal variables were recorded. The primary outcome was the association between preoperative HALP and surgical morbidity; the secondary outcomes were perioperative HALP changes and neonatal correlations. ROC analysis identified cutoff values; multivariable regression was used to determine predictors of HALP variability. Internal validity was assessed via bootstrap resampling (1000 and 5000 iterations). Results: Preoperative HALP was significantly greater in patients with complications (24.14 vs. 22.58; p = 0.023). ROC analysis yielded a cutoff of 29.23, with 53.2% sensitivity and 82.0% specificity (AUC: 0.602, 95% CI: 0.51–0.69;). HALP showed a biphasic perioperative pattern, increasing at 6 h and then decreasing at 24 h (p < 0.001). Elevated HALP was independently associated with earlier gestational age at diagnosis, lower birthweight, and reduced Apgar scores. Bootstrap analyses revealed a stable AUC (~0.60) and consistent cutoff estimates across resamples. Conclusions: Higher HALP scores, which are typically markers of favorable nutritional status, are paradoxically linked to increased maternal morbidity and adverse neonatal outcomes in patients with PAS. HALP may, therefore, reflect placental invasiveness rather than maternal reserve. Its low cost and dynamic behavior highlight its potential utility in preoperative risk stratification for high-risk obstetrics.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** ALB (albumin) [NCBI Gene 213] {aka FDAHT, HSA, PRO0883, PRO0903, PRO1341}
- **Diseases:** Placenta Accreta (MESH:D010921)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12609890/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12609890