Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Around one in ten women have high blood pressure in pregnancy. This is potentially serious, with risks to the woman and her baby. Whilst maternal deaths from high blood pressure in pregnancy are now rare in the UK, blood pressure problems in pregnancy still cause many stillbirths and early births. Studies have shown that women of Black and Asian backgrounds are more likely to have worse pregnancy outcomes when blood pressure problems in pregnancy develop. This study aims to: i) describe the burden of disease of high blood pressure in pregnancy amongst babies admitted to neonatal units on a national scale. ii) investigate outcomes for babies born to women with high blood pressure in pregnancy admitted to UK neonatal units across maternal ethnic groups. To complete this study, we will use the National Neonatal Research Database, which holds population-level data for all babies admitted to neonatal units (where unwell babies receive care) in the UK. We will look at records of babies admitted to neonatal units in England and Wales between 2012 and 2020. The records will include information on over half a million babies and their mothers. We will assess how many babies admitted to neonatal units were born to women who had high blood pressure in pregnancy. We will report the outcomes of these babies, and how they compare to babies born to women without high blood pressure in pregnancy. We will analyse whether outcomes for babies born to women with high blood pressure in pregnancy varies according to maternal ethnicity, and investigate what may be driving differences we find.


Clinical Trial Description

Study Aims This study aims to: - quantify the proportion of all babies admitted to neonatal units born to women with a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy - describe the national neonatal morbidity, mortality and resource use of babies admitted to neonatal units born to women with a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy - examine ethnic disparities in neonatal outcomes of babies admitted to neonatal units born to women with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. The National Neonatal Research Database (NNRD) The NNRD is an approved research database constituting real-world prospective clinical data extracted from point-of-care neonatal electronic health records with complete coverage of infants admitted for neonatal care to National Health Service (NHS) neonatal units in England and Wales (since 2012) and Scotland (since 2015). A defined data extract of approximately 450 items (the Neonatal Data Set) is transmitted quarterly to the Neonatal Data Analysis Unit at Imperial College London for data linkage and cleaning prior to entry into the NNRD. To date, the NNRD contains data for over a million babies (approximately 80,000 babies annually). High completeness and accuracy (>95%) of neonatal data held in the NNRD has been confirmed by formal comparison with a multicentre, randomised placebo-controlled trial. Study Design This study is a secondary analysis of an existing national electronic health record population cohort using anonymised, routinely recorded clinical data from the National Neonatal Research Database (NNRD). There will be no new patients recruited and there will be no changes made to patient care. The research team will work with NNRD data analysts to extract anonymised data from the NNRD. A cohort of babies born to women with a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy (HDP) will be defined based on records of maternal medical problems prior to pregnancy, obstetrics problems during pregnancy, medications given during labour and neonatal discharge diagnoses. The morbidity, mortality and health resource use of this cohort will be described in depth. This cohort will also be compared to a cohort of babies born to women without a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy. The HDP cohort will also be stratified by maternal ethnicity to investigate disparities in outcomes. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05015049
Study type Observational
Source Imperial College London
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase
Start date July 1, 2021
Completion date December 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT00974714 - L-arginine Effects on Chronic Hypertension in Pregnancy Phase 3
Terminated NCT03595982 - Is Procardia XL 60 mg Q Daily Equivalent to 30 mg XL Given Twice Daily? Phase 4
Completed NCT04486170 - Assessment of Postpartum Education to Improve Compliance N/A
Completed NCT03506724 - Response to Anti-hypertensives in Pregnant and Postpartum Patients Phase 4
Completed NCT03613714 - Innovation in Postpartum Care for Women With Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy N/A
Recruiting NCT04604535 - The BEET-BP Trial - Investigating the Effect of Dietary Nitrates on Hypertension in Pregnancy N/A
Completed NCT00412230 - Insulin Resistance and Hypertensive Disorders in Pregnancy N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05049616 - Oral Combined Hydrochlorothiazide/Lisinopril Versus Oral Nifedipine for Postpartum Hypertension Phase 4
Completed NCT04119232 - Randomized Clinical Trial to Increase Physical Activity After a a Hypertensive Pregnancy N/A
Completed NCT04633551 - Vascular Inflammation and Anti-inflammatory Supplements After Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes N/A
Completed NCT05859282 - Development and Validation of a Short Tool to Assess the Awareness of Pregnancy-induced Hypertension
Active, not recruiting NCT05543265 - Bridging the Gap From Postpartum to Primary Care N/A
Completed NCT00571766 - Effects of Oral L-Arginine on Chronic Hypertension in Pregnancy Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05473767 - Expanding the Family Check-Up in Early Childhood to Promote Cardiovascular Health of Mothers and Young Children N/A
Recruiting NCT05683093 - Cardiovascular Longitudinal ALSPAC Research Investigations Following Hypertensive Pregnancy in Young Adulthood
Completed NCT06403722 - Perinatal Outcomes in Patients With Elevated sFlt-1/PlGF Ratio
Recruiting NCT05852054 - Supporting Transitions to Primary Care Among Under-resourced, Postpartum Women (STEP-UP) Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05137808 - Understanding Blood Pressure Changes After Birth
Completed NCT03961360 - Effectiveness of Higher Aspirin Dosing for Prevention of Preeclampsia in High Risk Obese Gravida Phase 2/Phase 3
Active, not recruiting NCT03648645 - Hypertensive Pregnant Women Monitored by Teletransmitted Self-measurements of Blood Pressure N/A