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Pre-eclampsia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04725812 Terminated - Pregnancy Related Clinical Trials

Complement Regulation to Undo Systemic Harm in Preeclampsia

CRUSH
Start date: September 13, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase II, single arm, open-label study to determine if treatment with eculizumab prolongs pregnancy compared to historical controls in women with preeclampsia between 23-30 weeks gestation.

NCT ID: NCT04713228 Terminated - Pre-Eclampsia Clinical Trials

Prospective Case-Control Study of Cardiovascular Changes in Pregnancy Related Hypertensive Disorders

ARTSEN
Start date: July 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This is a research study to understand the changes in the heart and the cardiovascular system that may occur in women who develop high blood pressure during pregnancy.

NCT ID: NCT04402385 Terminated - Pre-Eclampsia Clinical Trials

Aspirin to Prevent Preeclampsia in Women With Elevated Blood Pressure and Stage 1 Hypertension (ASPPIRE)

Start date: August 6, 2020
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

To determine if low dose aspirin reduces the incidence of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, eclampsia, and HELLP syndrome) in pregnant women with stage 1 hypertension and elevated blood pressure.

NCT ID: NCT04243278 Terminated - Clinical trials for Cardiovascular Diseases

Postpartum Low-Dose Aspirin After Preeclampsia for Optimization of Cardiovascular Risk (PAPVASC)

PAPVASC
Start date: September 14, 2020
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Women who develop preeclampsia (PE) in pregnancy are at a greater risk for adverse cardiovascular health outcomes. PE is associated with vascular remodeling and functional changes in the postpartum, reflective of its systemic effects during gestation. Aberrant microvascular endothelial function has been demonstrated in pharmacological studies of formerly preeclamptic women. However, clinicians do not have any recourse for modulating vascular functional adaptations nor mitigating the future risk for maternal disease in the early postpartum. Low-dose aspirin (LD-ASA) is commonly prescribed to prevent PE and confers a consistently positive effect on mitigating PE risk when given in early gestation to women at risk. While the precise effect of LD-ASA on PE development is not fully understood, existing evidence suggests it may confer an array of anti-thrombotic, vasodilatory, pro-endothelial effects that mitigate the risk of disease. This study will be a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of LD-ASA administration over 6 months in the early postpartum in women with prior severe PE. Women will be identified, enrolled, and randomized to either treatment or placebo groups. Treatment groups will receive 81 mg daily oral aspirin, while control groups will receive an equivalent placebo pill. Vascular functional assessment at study outset will take place, combining laser speckle contrast imaging and iontophoresis of dilute vasoactive drug solutions. Blood and urine will be obtained for analysis of cardiometabolic and endothelial factors. Participants will take their assigned study drug for 6 months, after which a retest appointment will take place to assess vascular functional changes.

NCT ID: NCT04092829 Terminated - Pre-Eclampsia Clinical Trials

Impact of Corpus Luteum Presence or Absence in the Incidence of Preeclampsia After Frozen Embryo Transfer

PREECLAM-2019
Start date: September 16, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Identifying modifiable factors that contribute to preeclampsia risk associated with assisted reproduction can improve maternal health. Recent studies have shown an increased risk for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy after in vitro fertilization, particularly for pregnancies occurring during a hormone replacement therapy such a donor egg recipient and a frozen embryo transfer. This risk may be partly attributable to the degree by which the assisted reproductive treatment affects the maternal hormonal environment, when the corpus luteum is a major source of reproductive hormones. On the other hand, cryopreserved embryos are usually thawed and replaced in in a natural or hormonally manipulated cycle; on this point, frozen embryo transfer is associated with better perinatal outcome regarding preterm birth and low birth weight yet higher risk of large for gestational age and macrosomia compared to fresh transfer. The objective of our study is to investigate whether the absence of corpus luteum adversely affects pregnancy and to analyse if there are differences in the perinatal outcomes due to differences in the endometrial preparation protocol for a frozen embryo transfer.

NCT ID: NCT03877692 Terminated - Clinical trials for Chronic Hypertension in Obstetric Context

Acute Control of Chronic Hypertension

ACCTIVE
Start date: February 18, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to understand if administration of a personalized dose of the anti-hypertensive medication, labetalol, based on patient's history of preexisting hypertension, will be more effective at controlling severe hypertension during pregnancy, compared to the current standard dosing.

NCT ID: NCT03872336 Terminated - Clinical trials for Preeclampsia With Severe Features

Acute Labetalol Use in Preeclampsia

ALERT
Start date: February 18, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to understand if administration of a personalized dose of the anti-hypertensive medication, labetalol, based on patient's body-mass index, will be more effective at controlling severe hypertension during pregnancy, compared to the current standard dosing.

NCT ID: NCT03863639 Terminated - Pre-Eclampsia Clinical Trials

Changes in fMRI and Neurocognitive Function in Women With Pre-eclampsia

Start date: July 7, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a pilot study assessing fMRI changes and neurocognitive function in women with pre-eclampsia and healthy controls. Neurocognitive testing will be done during pregnancy and after delivery up to 2-6 weeks postpartum. fMRI will be done after delivery up to 2-6 weeks postpartum. The aims of this pilot study are therefore to 1) Determine the frequency and nature of co-morbid DTI white matter patency and fMRI functional connectivity changes in women with pre-eclampsia/eclampsia and 2) Determine the relationship between DTI white matter patency and fMRI functional connectivity changes to measurable alterations in cognitive function in this patient population. The aims of this pilot study are therefore to 1) Determine the frequency and nature of co-morbid DTI white matter patency and fMRI functional connectivity changes in women with pre-eclampsia/eclampsia and 2) Determine the relationship between DTI white matter patency and fMRI functional connectivity changes to measurable alterations in cognitive function in this patient population.

NCT ID: NCT03735433 Terminated - Preeclampsia Clinical Trials

The Effect of Two Aspirin Dosing Strategies for Obese Women at High Risk for Preeclampsia

Start date: January 15, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Low dose aspirin (LDA) is used for preeclampsia (PE) prevention in high risk women, but the precise mechanism and optimal dose is not known. Evidence in the non-obstetric literature suggests AR may be more common among patients with a high body mass index (BMI). Recent unpublished data showed that LDA substantially lowers TxB2 levels regardless of BMI, but rates of complete platelet inhibition are lower in women with BMI ≥40. This data suggests that higher doses of ASA may be necessary in obese women. Therefore we plan determine if use of 162mg compared to the traditional 81mg ASA decreased rates of preeclampsia in women considered high risk for developing preclampsia.

NCT ID: NCT03222414 Terminated - Blood Pressure Clinical Trials

Non-invasive Versus Invasive Blood Pressure Measurement in the Morbidly Obese Parturient With Severe Preeclampsia

Start date: May 1, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study will compare agreement of invasive blood pressure measurements with non-invasive blood pressure measurements measured with a conical blood pressure and large standard upper arm rectangular cuff in morbidly obese severely hypertensive (systolic blood pressure > 160 mmHg) parturients.