articleNew England Journal of MedicineJan 28, 2015BRONZE OA

Less-Tight versus Tight Control of Hypertension in Pregnancy

Centre for Advancing Health Outcomes · B.C. Women's Hospital & Health Centre · +15 more institutions

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Abstract

Background

The effects of less-tight versus tight control of hypertension on pregnancy complications are unclear.

Methods

We performed an open, international, multicenter trial involving women at 14 weeks 0 days to 33 weeks 6 days of gestation who had nonproteinuric preexisting or gestational hypertension, office diastolic blood pressure of 90 to 105 mm Hg (or 85 to 105 mm Hg if the woman was taking antihypertensive medications), and a live fetus. Women were randomly assigned to less-tight control (target diastolic blood pressure, 100 mm Hg) or tight control (target diastolic blood pressure, 85 mm Hg). The composite primary outcome was pregnancy loss or high-level neonatal care for more than 48 hours during the first 28 postnatal days. The secondary outcome was serious maternal complications occurring up to 6 weeks post partum or until hospital discharge, whichever was later.

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