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  • The incidence of pregnancy ...
    Magee, Laura A; Sharma, Sumedha; Nathan, Hannah L; Adetoro, Olalekan O; Bellad, Mrutynjaya B; Goudar, Shivaprasad; Macuacua, Salécio E; Mallapur, Ashalata; Qureshi, Rahat; Sevene, Esperança; Sotunsa, John; Valá, Anifa; Lee, Tang; Payne, Beth A; Vidler, Marianne; Shennan, Andrew H; Bhutta, Zulfiqar A; von Dadelszen, Peter

    PLoS medicine, 04/2019, Letnik: 16, Številka: 4
    Journal Article

    Most pregnancy hypertension estimates in less-developed countries are from cross-sectional hospital surveys and are considered overestimates. We estimated population-based rates by standardised methods in 27 intervention clusters of the Community-Level Interventions for Pre-eclampsia (CLIP) cluster randomised trials. CLIP-eligible pregnant women identified in their homes or local primary health centres (2013-2017). Included here are women who had delivered by trial end and received a visit from a community health worker trained to provide supplementary hypertension-oriented care, including standardised blood pressure (BP) measurement. Hypertension (BP ≥ 140/90 mm Hg) was defined as chronic (first detected at <20 weeks gestation) or gestational (≥20 weeks); pre-eclampsia was gestational hypertension plus proteinuria or a pre-eclampsia-defining complication. A multi-level regression model compared hypertension rates and types between countries (p < 0.05 considered significant). In 28,420 pregnancies studied, women were usually young (median age 23-28 years), parous (53.7%-77.3%), with singletons (≥97.5%), and enrolled at a median gestational age of 10.4 (India) to 25.9 weeks (Mozambique). Basic education varied (22.8% in Pakistan to 57.9% in India). Pregnancy hypertension incidence was lower in Pakistan (9.3%) than India (10.3%), Mozambique (10.9%), or Nigeria (10.2%) (p = 0.001). Most hypertension was diastolic only (46.4% in India, 72.7% in Pakistan, 61.3% in Mozambique, and 63.3% in Nigeria). At first presentation with elevated BP, gestational hypertension was most common diagnosis (particularly in Mozambique 8.4% versus India 6.9%, Pakistan 6.5%, and Nigeria 7.1%; p < 0.001), followed by pre-eclampsia (India 3.8%, Nigeria 3.0%, Pakistan 2.4%, and Mozambique 2.3%; p < 0.001) and chronic hypertension (especially in Mozambique 2.5% and Nigeria 2.8%, compared with India 1.2% and Pakistan 1.5%; p < 0.001). Inclusion of additional diagnoses of hypertension and related complications, from household surveys or facility record review (unavailable in Nigeria), revealed higher hypertension incidence: 14.0% in India, 11.6% in Pakistan, and 16.8% in Mozambique; eclampsia was rare (<0.5%). Pregnancy hypertension is common in less-developed settings. Most women in this study presented with gestational hypertension amenable to surveillance and timed delivery to improve outcomes. This study is a secondary analysis of a clinical trial - ClinicalTrials.gov registration number NCT01911494.