Blood pressure thresholds in pregnancy for identifying maternal and infant risk: a secondary analysis of Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) trial data. Issue 8 (August 2021)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- Blood pressure thresholds in pregnancy for identifying maternal and infant risk: a secondary analysis of Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) trial data. Issue 8 (August 2021)
- Main Title:
- Blood pressure thresholds in pregnancy for identifying maternal and infant risk: a secondary analysis of Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) trial data
- Authors:
- Bone, Jeffrey N
Magee, Laura A
Singer, Joel
Nathan, Hannah
Qureshi, Rahat N
Sacoor, Charfudin
Sevene, Esperança
Shennan, Andrew
Bellad, Mrutyunjaya B
Goudar, Shivaprasad S
Mallapur, Ashalata A
Munguambe, Khátia
Vidler, Marianne
Bhutta, Zulfiqar A
von Dadelszen, Peter
Woo Kinshella, Mai-Lei
Wong, Hubert
Vilanculo, Faustino
Vala, Anifa
Ukah, Ugochi V
Tu, Domena K
Thabane, Lehana
Tchavana, Corsino
Thornton, Jim
Sotunsa, John O
Sheikh, Sana
Sharma, Sumedha
Schuurman, Nadine
Sawchuck, Diane
Revankar, Amit P
Raza, Farrukh
Ramdurg, Umesh Y
Pires, Rosa
Payne, Beth A
Nobela, Vivalde
Nkumbula, Cláudio
Nhancolo, Ariel
Nhamirre, Zefanias
Mungarwadi, Geetanjali I
Mulungo, Dulce
Mocumbi, Sibone
Mitton, Craig
Merialdi, Mario
Memon, Javed
Matavele, Analisa
Mastiholi, Sphoorthi S
Mandlate, Ernesto
Maculuve, Sónia
Macuacua, Salésio
Macete, Eusébio
Macamo, Marta
Lui, Mansun
Li, Jing
Lewis, Gwyneth
Lewin, Simon
Lee, Tang
Langer, Ana
Kudachi, Uday S
Kodkany, Bhalachandra S
Knight, Marian
Kengapur, Gudadayya S
Kavi, Avinash J
Katageri, Geetanjali M
Kariya, Chirag
Karadiguddi, Chandrappa C
Kamble, Namdev A
Joshi, Anjali M
Hutton, Eileen
Hussain, Amjad
Hoodbhoy, Zahra
Honnungar, Narayan V
Grobman, William
Gonçálves, Emília
Firoz, Tabassum
Fillipi, Veronique
Filimone, Paulo
Engelbrecht, Susheela M
Dunsmuir, Dustin T
Dumont, Guy
Drebit, Sharla K
Donnay, France
Dharamsi, Shafik
Dhamanekar, Vaibhav B
Derman, Richard
Darlow, Brian
Cutana, Silvestre
Chougala, Keval S
Chiaú, Rogério
Charantimath, Umesh S
Byaruhanga, Romano Nkumbwa
Boene, Helena
Biz, Ana Ilda
Bique, Cassimo
Betrán, Ana Pilar
Bannale, Shashidhar G
Augusto, Orvalho
Ansermino, J Mark
Amose, Felizarda
Ahmed, Imran
Adetoro, Olalekan O
… (more) - Abstract:
- Summary: Background: Blood pressure measurement is a marker of antenatal care quality. In well resourced settings, lower blood pressure cutoffs for hypertension are associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. We aimed to study the associations between blood pressure thresholds and adverse outcomes and the diagnostic test properties of these blood pressure cutoffs in low-resource settings. Methods: We did a secondary analysis of data from 22 intervention clusters in the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) cluster randomised trials (NCT01911494 ) in India (n=6), Mozambique (n=6), and Pakistan (n=10). We included pregnant women aged 15–49 years (12–49 years in Mozambique), identified in their community by trained community health workers, who had data on blood pressure measurements and outcomes. The trial was unmasked. Maximum blood pressure was categorised as: normal blood pressure (systolic blood pressure [sBP] <120 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure [dBP] <80 mm Hg), elevated blood pressure (sBP 120–129 mm Hg and dBP <80 mm Hg), stage 1 hypertension (sBP 130–139 mm Hg or dBP 80–89 mm Hg, or both), non-severe stage 2 hypertension (sBP 140–159 mm Hg or dBP 90–109 mm Hg, or both), or severe stage 2 hypertension (sBP ≥160 mm Hg or dBP ≥110 mm Hg, or both). We classified women according to the maximum blood pressure category reached across all visits for the primary analyses. The primary outcome was a maternal, fetal, or neonatal mortality or morbiditySummary: Background: Blood pressure measurement is a marker of antenatal care quality. In well resourced settings, lower blood pressure cutoffs for hypertension are associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. We aimed to study the associations between blood pressure thresholds and adverse outcomes and the diagnostic test properties of these blood pressure cutoffs in low-resource settings. Methods: We did a secondary analysis of data from 22 intervention clusters in the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) cluster randomised trials (NCT01911494 ) in India (n=6), Mozambique (n=6), and Pakistan (n=10). We included pregnant women aged 15–49 years (12–49 years in Mozambique), identified in their community by trained community health workers, who had data on blood pressure measurements and outcomes. The trial was unmasked. Maximum blood pressure was categorised as: normal blood pressure (systolic blood pressure [sBP] <120 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure [dBP] <80 mm Hg), elevated blood pressure (sBP 120–129 mm Hg and dBP <80 mm Hg), stage 1 hypertension (sBP 130–139 mm Hg or dBP 80–89 mm Hg, or both), non-severe stage 2 hypertension (sBP 140–159 mm Hg or dBP 90–109 mm Hg, or both), or severe stage 2 hypertension (sBP ≥160 mm Hg or dBP ≥110 mm Hg, or both). We classified women according to the maximum blood pressure category reached across all visits for the primary analyses. The primary outcome was a maternal, fetal, or neonatal mortality or morbidity composite. We estimated dose-response relationships between blood pressure category and adverse outcomes, as well as diagnostic test properties. Findings: Between Nov 1, 2014, and Feb 28, 2017, 21 069 women (6067 in India, 4163 in Mozambique, and 10 839 in Pakistan) contributed 103 679 blood pressure measurements across the three CLIP trials. Only women with non-severe or severe stage 2 hypertension, as discrete diagnostic categories, experienced more adverse outcomes than women with normal blood pressure (risk ratios 1·29–5·88). Using blood pressure categories as diagnostic thresholds (women with blood pressure within the category or any higher category vs those with blood pressure in any lower category), dose-response relationships were observed between increasing thresholds and adverse outcomes, but likelihood ratios were informative only for severe stage 2 hypertension and maternal CNS events (likelihood ratio 6·36 [95% CI 3·65–11·07]) and perinatal death (5·07 [3·64–7·07]), particularly stillbirth (8·53 [5·63–12·92]). Interpretation: In low-resource settings, neither elevated blood pressure nor stage 1 hypertension were associated with maternal, fetal, or neonatal mortality or morbidity adverse composite outcomes. Only the threshold for severe stage 2 hypertension met diagnostic test performance standards. Current diagnostic thresholds for hypertension in pregnancy should be retained. Funding: University of British Columbia, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Lancet. Volume 9:Issue 8(2021)
- Journal:
- Lancet
- Issue:
- Volume 9:Issue 8(2021)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 9, Issue 8 (2021)
- Year:
- 2021
- Volume:
- 9
- Issue:
- 8
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2021-0009-0008-0000
- Page Start:
- e1119
- Page End:
- e1128
- Publication Date:
- 2021-08
- Subjects:
- World health -- Periodicals
362.105 - Journal URLs:
- http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/2214109X ↗
http://www.sciencedirect.com/ ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1016/S2214-109X(21)00219-9 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 2214-109X
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - BLDSS-3PM
British Library HMNTS - ELD Digital store - Ingest File:
- 18309.xml