Hypertension in the Obstetric Context Clinical Trial
Official title:
Postpartum Hypertension, Tight vs Liberal Control: A Randomized Controlled Trial
To determine if treatment of less severe hypertension in the postpartum period results in a lower frequency of maternal morbidity.
Patients with postpartum hypertension are at risk of developing preeclampsia, eclampsia, and severe maternal morbidity. About one-third of eclampsia occurs in the postpartum period. Fifty percent of intra-cerebral hemorrhages occurring in association with preeclampsia occur in the postpartum period. In addition to the maternal morbidity that may arise from severe hypertension in the postpartum period, additional consequences of inadequate blood pressure control include maternal readmission, its associated costs to the healthcare system, and its destabilizing effect on a new family. Furthermore, pregnant women with hypertensive disorders in pregnancy are at an increased risk of persistent postpartum hypertension and metabolic syndrome within the first year after delivery. Therefore, untreated postpartum hypertension may significantly impact on long term cardiometabolic outcomes for reproductive aged-women. Evidence-based guidance is lacking on the blood pressure threshold to initiate antihypertensive therapy in the postpartum period. Current clinical practice is extrapolated from management during pregnancy and no prior trials have been conducted on the threshold for initiation of antihypertensive medication in the postpartum period. A systematic review in 2017 concluded "there is a lack of good quality evidence for postpartum management, emphasizing the need for further RCTs directly comparing different antihypertensive agents, BP threshold for medication adjustment and different models of care, with outcome measures other than postnatal readmissions" Based on low quality evidence/expert opinion ACOG and the National Institute of Heath and Care Excellence (NICE) in the UK both recommend initiating antihypertensive at a BP threshold of 150/100mmhg. NICE further recommends keeping BP lower than 140/90mmHg in patients with chronic hypertension and reducing antihypertensive medications when BP is less than 130/80mmHg in this population. ACOG does not mention at which BP threshold to reduce medications or when to stop antihypertensive therapy. There are obvious gaps in knowledge as stated in the systematic review. Therefore, our objective is to provide evidence to inform best practices with regards to the management of hypertension in the postpartum period through this randomized controlled trial. ;