Women face substantially
high risk of post pregnancy hypertension in the first year after the index pregnancy
and the risk persists for more than 20 years, with 14- 32% for the first decade
reports the result of a nationwide register based cohort study published in
July issue of BMJ.
Nearly one
third of women with hypertensive disorder of pregnancy will develop
hypertension within 10 years of the affected pregnancy, so blood pressure
monitoring should be initiated immediately after delivery.
What is already
known:
Women who
have a history of hypertensive disorders while pregnant have 2 to 4-fold increased
risk of developing essential hypertension, and a subsequent CV event.
But the data
about the timing of developing hypertension and the time at which the screening
of these at-risk women should begin is not known.
What the
study adds:
This study gives
us the chronology of events: How soon the women may develop hypertension, how long
the risk will persist after the affected pregnancy and when to start monitoring
these women for development of hypertension.
The study
identified 482972 women through Danish civil registration system, of these 23235
(4.8%) women developed hypertensive disorder of pregnancy and 16611 developed
hypertension during follow-up.
In a cohort
of more than one million women delivering in Denmark from 1978-2012, the
investigators formed two cohorts and followed them for estimation of cumulative
incidence of post-pregnancy hypertension and the other cohort for the
estimation of hazard ratios for post-pregnancy hypertension.
Women with chronic
hypertension were excluded from the study.
In women who
had normotensive first pregnancy in 20s, 30s, or 40s, the cumulative incidences
of hypertension in the first 10 years after delivery were 4.0%, 5.7%, and
11.3%, respectively, whereas in women with hypertensive disorder the
corresponding incidence were 13.7%, 20.3%, and 32.4%, respectively.
In women
with history of hypertensive disorder in most recent pregnancy, the rates of
developing hypertension were 12-fold to 25-fold higher in the first-year after
delivery and up to 10-fold higher in the coming 10 years.
Women face 2
fold increase risk of developing hypertension, that lasts for the next 20
years, if they have a previous history of hypertensive disorder in pregnancy as
compared to women who had normal blood pressure while pregnant.
Why this
study is important:
Large
cohort, elimination of selection and recall bias.
Data
adjusted for age, parity, smoking status, diabetes and BMI.
Immediate
post-partum period is very important: The risk of developing hypertension is
highest shortly after an affected pregnancy but persists for more than 20
years.
The higher
risk of hypertension in a decade after the affected pregnancy also indicates
that the etiopathological process causing hypertension in later life, are
already at play during the affected pregnancy.
A
hypertensive disorder of pregnancy in the second pregnancy was more strongly
associated with later hypertension than a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy in
the first pregnancy.
Initiation
of regular blood pressure assessments should begin soon after a pregnancy
complicated by a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy for prompt identification
of hypertension in these women.
What is
needed in the future:
An algorithm
to identify those at greatest risk (the subgroup most likely to benefit from
screening) is urgently needed; identification of biomarkers that predict which
women will develop hypertension after an affected pregnancy would be very
useful.
Quantification
of cardiovascular events that can be prevented by early identification of these
at-risk women is also needed.
More
randomized control trials to form policies on clinical follow up of such women.
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