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Safer for mum and baby to treat high BP

A recently released international (15-country) study has shown that treating a woman’s elevated blood pressure during pregnancy is safer for her, and safe for her baby. As a result of these findings, Dr Laura Magee, a researcher at the Child & Family Research Institute and the University of British Columbia and a physician at BC Women’s Hospital and Health Centre, and her collaborators recommend normalising blood pressure in pregnant women.

"Before this study, I was a 'less tight' controller," Magee says. "I was hoping that this approach would be better for the baby, without increasing risks for the mother. However, I was wrong. 'Less tight' control, which means allowing blood pressure to be mildly to moderately elevated in pregnancy, is not better for the baby. It's actually harmful to the mother, who will more often experience levels of blood pressure that increase the risk of stroke. As a responsible maternity care provider, I can no longer justify a 'less tight' approach to blood pressure control."

The study, which tracked the health of 987 women and their newborns at 94 sites around the world, addresses an age-old belief that reducing elevated blood pressure during pregnancy might lead to reduced growth in the womb and worse health at birth.

But normalising a pregnant women's elevated blood pressure did not result in poorer outcomes for babies before or after birth. At the same time, allowing the mother’s blood pressure to be mildly to moderately elevated in pregnancy led to more episodes of dangerously elevated blood pressure that increase the risk of stroke and death for the mother during pregnancy.

The CHIPS Trial (Control of Hypertension in Pregnancy Study) was designed to study the impact of either 'less tight' or 'tight' control of high blood pressure during pregnancy on outcomes for the baby and for the mother with 987 women participating between 2009 and 2012 at 94 study sites in 15 countries. Women participating were between 14 and 33 weeks pregnant. They were randomly assigned to one of two groups. A group of 497 women had 'less tight' control with a target diastolic blood pressure of 100 mmHg, while the second group of 490 women had 'tight' control with a target diastolic blood pressure of 85 mmHg. Most of the women in both groups received blood pressure medication at some point in the trial (77% in the 'less tight' group and 94% in the 'tight' control group).

The researchers found that the number of babies who died or were admitted for prolonged newborn intensive care was similar between the two blood pressure control groups. Foetal growth was also similar.

[link url="http://www.cfri.ca/news/news/2015/01/28/new-research-recommends-treating-elevated-blood-pressure-during-pregnancy-safer-for-the-mother-safe-for-baby"]Child and Family Research Institute release[/link]
[link url="http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1404595?query=featured_home"]New England Journal of Medicine article summary[/link]

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