Multicenter Cohort Study, With a Nested Randomized Comparison, to Examine the Cardiovascular Impact of Preterm Preeclampsia

Author:

McCarthy Fergus P.12ORCID,O’Driscoll Jamie M.3ORCID,Seed Paul T.1ORCID,Placzek Anna45ORCID,Gill Carolyn1ORCID,Sparkes Jenie1ORCID,Poston Lucilla1,Marber Mike6,Shennan Andrew H.1,Thilaganathan Basky7,Leeson Paul8,Chappell Lucy C.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Women and Children’s Health (F.P.M., P.T.S., C.G., J.S., L.P., A.H.S., L.C.C.), King’s College London, London, United Kingdom

2. Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, The INFANT Research Centre, University College Cork, Cork University Maternity Hospital, Ireland (F.P.M.)

3. School of Psychology and Life Science, Canterbury Christ Church University, Kent, United Kingdom (J.M.O.)

4. Department of Cardiology, St George’s University Hospitals National Health Service Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom (J.M.O.)

5. National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit (NPEU), Nuffield Department of Population Health (A.P.), University of Oxford

6. Cardiovascular Division (M.M.), King’s College London, London, United Kingdom

7. Fetal Medicine Unit, St George’s University Hospitals National Health Service Foundation Trust and Molecular & Clinical Sciences Research Institute, St George’s University of London, United Kingdom (B.T.).

8. Oxford Cardiovascular Clinical Research Facility, Radcliffe Department of Medicine (P.L.), University of Oxford

Abstract

This study evaluated whether planned early delivery would ameliorate cardiovascular dysfunction 6 months postpartum, compared with usual care with expectant management, in women with late preterm preeclampsia. We conducted a mechanistic observational study in women with preterm preeclampsia between 34 +0 and 36 +6 weeks’ gestation, nested within a randomized controlled trial of planned early delivery versus expectant management (usual care), in 28 maternity hospitals in England and Wales. Women were followed up 6 months postpartum with cardiovascular assessments. The primary outcome was a composite of systolic and diastolic dysfunction (by 2009 and 2016 definitions of diastolic dysfunction). Between April 27, 2016, and November 30, 2018, 623 women were found to be eligible, of whom 420 (67%) were recruited. One hundred thirty-three women were randomized to planned delivery, 137 women were randomized to expectant management within the trial, while 150 women received expectant management outside of the trial. 321 (76.4%) completed their 6 month echocardiography assessment. 10% (31/321) had a left ventricular ejection fraction <55% while 71% (229/321) remained hypertensive. There were no differences in the primary outcome between the 2 randomized groups (planned delivery versus expectant management) using either the 2009 (risk ratio, 1.06 [95% CI, 0.80–1.40]) or 2016 definitions (risk ratio, 0.78 [0.33–1.86]). In conclusion, we demonstrated that late preterm preeclampsia results in persistence of hypertension in the majority and systolic LV dysfunction in 10%, of women 6 months postpartum. Planned early delivery does not affect these outcomes. Preeclampsia is not a self-limiting disease of pregnancy alone.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

Reference51 articles.

1. Townsend, N, Williams, J, Bhatnagar, P, Wickramasinghe, K, Rayner, M. Cardiovascular Disease Statistics, 2014. British Heart Foundation; 2014.

2. Preeclampsia and Cardiovascular Disease in a Large UK Pregnancy Cohort of Linked Electronic Health Records

3. Pre-eclampsia and risk of cardiovascular disease and cancer in later life: systematic review and meta-analysis

4. Effectiveness-Based Guidelines for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease in Women—2011 Update

5. British Heart Foundation. Coronary heart disease statistics in England 2012. http://www.bhf.org.uk/publications/view-publication.aspx?ps=1001546

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