The CHIPS randomized controlled trial (control of hypertension in pregnancy study)

Laura A. Magee, Peter Von Dadelszen, Joel Singer, Terry Lee, Evelyne Rey, Susan Ross, Elizabeth Asztalos, Kellie E. Murphy, Jennifer Menzies, Johanna Sanchez, Amiram Gafni, Michael Helewa, Eileen Hutton, Gideon Koren, Shoo K. Lee, Alexander G. Logan, Wessel Ganzevoort, Ross Welch, Jim G. Thornton, Jean Marie Moutquin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

180 Scopus citations

Abstract

To determine whether clinical outcomes differed by occurrence of severe hypertension in the international CHIPS trial (Control of Hypertension in Pregnancy Study), adjusting for the interventions of "less tight" (target diastolic blood pressure [dBP] 100 mm Hg) versus "tight" control (target dBP 85 mm Hg). In this post-hoc analysis of CHIPS data from 987 women with nonsevere nonproteinuric preexisting or gestational hypertension, mixed effects logistic regression was used to compare the following outcomes according to occurrence of severe hypertension, adjusting for allocated group and the influence of baseline factors: CHIPS primary (perinatal loss or high-level neonatal care for >48 hours) and secondary outcomes (serious maternal complications), birth weight <10th percentile, preeclampsia, delivery at <34 or <37 weeks, platelets <100×10 9 /L, elevated liver enzymes with symptoms, maternal length of stay ≥10 days, and maternal readmission before 6 weeks postpartum. Three hundred and thirty-four (34.1%) women in CHIPS developed severe hypertension that was associated with all outcomes examined except for maternal readmission (P=0.20): CHIPS primary outcome, birth weight <10th percentile, preeclampsia, preterm delivery, elevated liver enzymes (all P<0.001), platelets <100×10 9 /L (P=0.006), and prolonged hospital stay (P=0.03). The association between severe hypertension and serious maternal complications was seen only in less tight control (P=0.02). Adjustment for preeclampsia (464, 47.3%) did not negate the relationship between severe hypertension and the CHIPS primary outcome (P<0.001), birth weight <10th percentile (P=0.005), delivery at <37 (P<0.001) or <34 weeks (P<0.001), or elevated liver enzymes with symptoms (P=0.02). Severe hypertension is a risk marker for adverse maternal and perinatal outcomes, independent of BP control or preeclampsia co-occurrence.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1153-1159
Number of pages7
JournalHypertension
Volume68
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Nov 2016
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • antihypertensive therapy
  • hypertension
  • labetalol
  • methyldopa
  • pregnancy

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