Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05152550 |
Other study ID # |
122016 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
May 1, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
March 30, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
December 2021 |
Source |
Ain Shams Maternity Hospital |
Contact |
Ahmed Nagy Younis, MBBCH |
Phone |
+201013553910 |
Email |
ahmednagyyounis[@]gmail.com |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Preeclampsia is a multi-system progressive disorder characterized by the new onset of
hypertension and proteinuria, or hypertension and significant end-organ dysfunction with or
without proteinuria, in the last half of pregnancy or postpartum. The genesis of the disease
is laid down in early pregnancy and is characterized anatomically by abnormal remodeling of
the maternal spiral arteries at the placental site.
Description:
Eclampsia was firstly reported in 2200 BC in papyri of ancient Egypt. Eclampsia is originally
a Greek word ´eklampsis and means "bright light". For 2000 years, eclampsia was known as a
disease of convulsions in late gestation that resolves by childbirth. Scientists of late 19th
century recognized the similarity in the swollen appearance of pregnant women who had
seizures and explained all by the onset of glomerulonephritis with proteinuria. With the
advanced noninvasive blood pressure measurement, it was observed that those women had
increased blood pressure and not a long time before understanding that proteinuria and
arterial hypertension occurrence before seizures. Thus, it was defined as "pre-eclampsia"
that now it is a life-threatening condition for both the mother and the fetus.
Nowadays, hypertensive disorders during pregnancy, with an incidence that varies according to
different measures, can exceed 10% in some population. Between multiple causes of maternal
mortality and morbidity Pre-eclampsia and eclampsia are the second or third. [2]
A study made by WHO between 2003 and 2009 ranked hypertensive disorders as a cause of
maternal deaths in the second grade, occurring in 14% of the cases, and in the first grade
was hemorrhagic causes, responsible for 27.1%. [3] The 20th week of gestation is a period of
interest as it is the landmark in the classification of hypertensive disorders because it is
the time of the second wave of chorionic invasion. Thus hypertensive disorders were
classified into two groups. The first one is before 20 weeks of gestation and includes
essential chronic or secondary hypertension, white coat hypertension, "Masked" hypertension.
The second group which appears at or after 20 weeks of gestation includes transient
gestational hypertension, gestational hypertension, and pre-eclampsia.
In 2013, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) replaced the term
"severe pre-eclampsia" with the term "preeclampsia with severe features" which means systolic
blood pressure ≥160 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure ≥110 mmHg on at least 2 occasions, at
least 4 hours apart after 20 weeks of gestation in a previously normotensive patient (with or
without proteinuria) and the new onset of 1 or more of the following features:
A. Symptoms: Epigastric pain, hypochondrial pain, Cerebral or visual symptoms (e.g.,
new-onset and persistent headaches not accounted for by alternative diagnoses and not
responding to usual doses of analgesics, blurred vision, flashing lights or sparks,
scotomata).
B. Signs: Pulmonary edema and/or generalized edema.
C. Laboratory findings:
- Proteinuria ≥ 0.3 gm in a 24-hour urine specimen or protein/creatinine ratio ≥ 0.3
(mg/mg) (30 mg/m.mol) in a random urine specimen or dipstick ≥2+ if a quantitative
measurement is unavailable.
- Platelet count <100,000/µL.
- Serum creatinine >1.1 mg/d L (97.2 µmol/L) or doubling of the creatinine concentration
in the absence of another renal disease.
- Liver transaminases are at least twice the upper limit of the normal concentrations for
the local laboratory.
In contrast to older criteria, the 2013 criteria severity features do not include proteinuria
>5 g/24 hours and fetal growth restriction as features of severe disease.
So non-severe pre-eclampsia means that systolic BP from 130 to less than 160 mmHg, diastolic
BP from 80 to less than 110 mmHg, and Proteinuria ≥ 0.3 gm in a 24-hour urine specimen or
protein/creatinine ratio ≥ 0.3 (mg/mg) (30 mg/m.mol) in a random urine specimen or dipstick
≥2+ if a quantitative measurement is unavailable without the presence of the above-mentioned
severity features.
In a woman with chronic/preexisting hypertension, criteria for superimposed preeclampsia are
the new onset of proteinuria, significant end-organ dysfunction, or both after 20 weeks of
gestation. For women with chronic/preexisting hypertension who have proteinuria prior to or
in early pregnancy, superimposed preeclampsia is defined by worsening or resistant
hypertension (especially acutely) in the last half of pregnancy or development of signs or
symptoms of the severe end of the disease spectrum.