Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Women destined to develop gestational hypertensive complications often exhibit deviant hemodynamic adaptation patterns before overt clinical disease. Gestational hypertension and late onset preeclampsia are associated with an exaggerated rise in cardiac output on top of a higher prepregnant value, whereas a shallow rise in cardiac output and the lack of a peripheral resistance drop predisposes to the much less common early onset-preeclampsia along with impaired fetal growth. Early treatment of altered cardiac output and peripheral resistance adjustments might prevent development of gestational hypertensive complications. The investigators aim to evaluate early cardiovascular adjustments during pregnancy in a high-risk population, and to pharmaceutically adjust deviant cardiovascular adaptations with beta-blockade, centrally acting sympatholytic agents or vasodilating agents when appropriate to prevent adverse effects on neonatal birth weight.


Clinical Trial Description

Healthy pregnancy is accompanied by major hemodynamic changes that benefit the uteroplacental circulation. A first-trimester drop in vascular resistance triggers several compensatory mechanisms, amongst an increase in blood volume and cardiac output, to maintain blood pressure. These adaptations continue and stand until delivery.

Women destined to develop gestational hypertensive complications often exhibit deviant hemodynamic adaptation patterns before overt clinical disease. On the one hand, gestational hypertension and late onset preeclampsia are associated with an exaggerated rise in cardiac output on top of a higher prepregnant value, whereas a shallow rise in cardiac output and the lack of a peripheral resistance drop predisposes to the much less common early onset-preeclampsia along with impaired fetal growth.

Antihypertensive therapy based on correction of the hemodynamic imbalance between cardiac output and peripheral resistance seems an effective strategy to improve blood pressure control in hypertensive pregnant women. Even more sophisticated, early treatment of altered cardiac output and peripheral resistance adjustments might prevent development of gestational hypertensive complications. One randomized controlled trial treated pregnant women with an augmented cardiac output with a selective beta-blocker, which resulted in a decreased prevalence of preeclampsia from 18% in the placebo group to 4% in the atenolol group (p = 0.04), at a cost of 440gram birth weight.

In line of this reasoning, the investigators aimed to evaluate early cardiovascular adjustments during pregnancy in a high-risk population (i.e. women with preeclampsia in their first pregnancy). In this health care traject, women with deviant adaptation to pregnancy were advised tailored medication, i.e. beta-blockade in women with an pronounced high cardiac output profile effectuated by a high heart rate, and a vasodilating agent in women with a high-resistance hemodynamic profile. Women with a mixed hemodynamic profile were advised a centrally acting sympatholytic agent. The investigators aimed to retrospectively compare outcome of women attending this health care project with women who received care as usual in their second pregnancy. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04216706
Study type Observational
Source Maastricht University Medical Center
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date November 1, 2014
Completion date March 1, 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03510286 - Validation of a PrCr Dipstick Diagnostic Test in Ghana
Recruiting NCT03313024 - Berlin-Brandenburg Pregnancy Cohort
Active, not recruiting NCT04990141 - Molecular Screening Method for Preeclampsia (PREMOM)
Completed NCT02147626 - Heart Health 4 Moms Trial to Reduce CVD Risk After Preeclampsia N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05999851 - Multiparametric Assessment of Maternal Vascular Function in the Prediction of Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy N/A
Recruiting NCT02923206 - Proof-of-Concept Trial on Selective Removal of sFlt-1 in Pregnant Women With Preeclampsia Via Apheresis N/A
Completed NCT02554604 - Identifying HDL Composition and Function in Preeclamptic and Normal Pregnancies
Withdrawn NCT05016440 - Lisinopril for Renal Protection in Postpartum Preeclamptic Women N/A
Terminated NCT02558023 - The Treatment of Hypertension Associated With Severe Preeclampsia (PE). A Trial of Urapidil Versus Nicardipine Phase 3
Completed NCT02384226 - User Testing and Feedback for a Mobile Health Program for Postpartum Women: A Pilot Study
Completed NCT02854501 - Second Trimester Maternal Serum Homocysteine Levels and Uterine Artery Doppler for Prediction of Preeclampsia and Placentation Disorders
Not yet recruiting NCT02541110 - Prediction of Preeclampsia & Other Obstetric Complications by Serum Homocysteine & Doppler N/A
Recruiting NCT02247297 - Pancreatic Stone Protein (PSP) in Pregnant Women
Recruiting NCT02337049 - Preeclampsia Subtypes and Surrogate Markers of CVD Risk N/A
Completed NCT02238704 - Cornell University-Micronutrient Initiative Calcium Supplementation Study N/A
Completed NCT01195441 - Prediction and Prevention of Preeclampsia by First Trimester Ultrasound N/A
Withdrawn NCT01179542 - The Involvement of Eukaryotic Translation Initiation Factor 4E (eIF4E) in Human Placental Implantation and in the Pathological Pregnancies: Preeclampsia and IUGR N/A
Completed NCT00456118 - Study of the Role of Tissular Maternofetal Alloimmunization in Placentation Pathologies
Recruiting NCT00117546 - Cardiovascular and Autonomic Reactivity in Women With a History of Pre-eclampsia Phase 4
Completed NCT00787241 - Platelet Count Trends in Pre-eclamptic Parturients N/A