TY - JOUR
T1 - Influence of gestational age at initiation of antihypertensive therapy
T2 - Secondary analysis of CHIPS trial data (control of hypertension in pregnancy study)
AU - The CHIPS Study Group
AU - Pels, Anouk
AU - Mol, Ben Willem J.
AU - Singer, Joel
AU - Lee, Terry
AU - Von Dadelszen, Peter
AU - Ganzevoort, Wessel
AU - Asztalos, Elizabeth
AU - Magee, Laura A.
AU - Gafni, Amiram
AU - Gruslin, Andrée
AU - Helewa, Michael
AU - Hutton, Eileen
AU - Lee, Shoo
AU - Logan, Alexander
AU - Menzies, Jennifer
AU - Moutquin, Jean Marie
AU - Murphy, Kellie
AU - Rey, Evelyne
AU - Ross, Sue
AU - Sanchez, Johanna
AU - Thornton, Jim G.
AU - Welch, Ross
AU - Hoac, Trinh
AU - Kirton, Joanne
AU - Trigiani, Katherine
AU - Zahid, Ainy
AU - Bracken, Michael B.
AU - Crowley, Patricia
AU - Duley, Lelia
AU - Ehrenkranz, Richard
AU - Thorpe, Kevin
AU - Chan, Sunny
AU - Shi, Michael
AU - Yu, Shelley
AU - Martin, Raquel De Lourdes
AU - Bassi, Maria Florencia
AU - Clara Caruso, Mirta
AU - Lagunas, Valeria
AU - Vera, Fernando
AU - De Duhalde, Maria Mohedano
AU - Roque, Alicia Beatriz
AU - Roldan, Patricia
AU - Duhalde, Esteban Marcos
AU - Dip, Viviana
AU - Aguirre, Jesus Daniel
AU - Alicia Morales, Elba Mirta
AU - Abreo, Griselda Itati
AU - De Sagastizabal, Teresa
AU - Gomez, Carolina
AU - Hallak, Mordechai
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Authors.
PY - 2018/1/1
Y1 - 2018/1/1
N2 - For hypertensive women in CHIPS (Control of Hypertension in Pregnancy Study), we assessed whether the maternal benefits of tight control could be achieved, while minimizing any potentially negative effect on fetal growth, by delaying initiation of antihypertensive therapy until later in pregnancy. For the 981 women with nonsevere, chronic or gestational hypertension randomized to less-tight (target diastolic blood pressure, 100 mm Hg), or tight (target, 85 mm Hg) control, we used mixed-effects logistic regression to examine whether the effect of less-tight (versus tight) control on major outcomes was dependent on gestational age at randomization, adjusting for baseline factors as in the primary analysis and including an interaction term between gestational age at randomization and treatment allocation. Gestational age was considered categorically (quartiles) and continuously (linear or quadratic form), and the optimal functional form selected to provide the best fit to the data based on the Akaike information criterion. Randomization before (but not after) 24 weeks to less-tight (versus tight) control was associated with fewer babies with birth weight <10th centile (Pinteraction=0.005), but more preterm birth (Pinteraction=0.043), and no effect on perinatal death or high-level neonatal care >48 hours (Pinteraction=0.354). For the mother, less-tight (versus tight) control was associated with more severe hypertension at all gestational ages but particularly so before 28 weeks (Pinteraction=0.076). In women with nonsevere, chronic, or gestational hypertension, there seems to be no gestational age at which less-tight (versus tight) control is the preferred management strategy to optimize maternal or perinatal outcomes.
AB - For hypertensive women in CHIPS (Control of Hypertension in Pregnancy Study), we assessed whether the maternal benefits of tight control could be achieved, while minimizing any potentially negative effect on fetal growth, by delaying initiation of antihypertensive therapy until later in pregnancy. For the 981 women with nonsevere, chronic or gestational hypertension randomized to less-tight (target diastolic blood pressure, 100 mm Hg), or tight (target, 85 mm Hg) control, we used mixed-effects logistic regression to examine whether the effect of less-tight (versus tight) control on major outcomes was dependent on gestational age at randomization, adjusting for baseline factors as in the primary analysis and including an interaction term between gestational age at randomization and treatment allocation. Gestational age was considered categorically (quartiles) and continuously (linear or quadratic form), and the optimal functional form selected to provide the best fit to the data based on the Akaike information criterion. Randomization before (but not after) 24 weeks to less-tight (versus tight) control was associated with fewer babies with birth weight <10th centile (Pinteraction=0.005), but more preterm birth (Pinteraction=0.043), and no effect on perinatal death or high-level neonatal care >48 hours (Pinteraction=0.354). For the mother, less-tight (versus tight) control was associated with more severe hypertension at all gestational ages but particularly so before 28 weeks (Pinteraction=0.076). In women with nonsevere, chronic, or gestational hypertension, there seems to be no gestational age at which less-tight (versus tight) control is the preferred management strategy to optimize maternal or perinatal outcomes.
KW - Blood pressure
KW - Fetal growth restriction
KW - Humans
KW - Hypertension, pregnancy-induced
KW - Preeclampsia
KW - Pregnancy outcome
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85061978854&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.117.10689
DO - 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.117.10689
M3 - Article
C2 - 29686009
AN - SCOPUS:85061978854
SN - 0194-911X
VL - 71
SP - 1170
EP - 1177
JO - Hypertension
JF - Hypertension
IS - 6
ER -