Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Government Medical College, Nagpur, India.
Lancet. 2019 Sep 21;394(10203):1011-1021. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(19)31282-6. Epub 2019 Aug 1.
Hypertension is the most common medical disorder in pregnancy, complicating one in ten pregnancies. Treatment of severely increased blood pressure is widely recommended to reduce the risk for maternal complications. Regimens for the acute treatment of severe hypertension typically include intravenous medications. Although effective, these drugs require venous access and careful fetal monitoring and might not be feasible in busy or low-resource environments. We therefore aimed to compare the efficacy and safety of three oral drugs, labetalol, nifedipine retard, and methyldopa for the management of severe hypertension in pregnancy.
In this multicentre, parallel-group, open-label, randomised controlled trial, we compared these oral antihypertensives in two public hospitals in Nagpur, India. Pregnant women were eligible for the trial if they were aged at least 18 years; they were pregnant with fetuses that had reached a gestational age of at least 28 weeks; they required pharmacological blood pressure control for severe hypertension (systolic blood pressure ≥160 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure ≥110 mm Hg); and were able to swallow oral medications. Women were randomly assigned to receive 10 mg oral nifedipine, 200 mg oral labetalol (hourly, in both of which the dose could be escalated if hypertension was maintained), or 1000 mg methyldopa (a single dose, without dose escalation). Masking of participants, study investigators, and care providers to group allocation was not possible because of different escalation protocols in the study groups. The primary outcome was blood pressure control (defined as 120-150 mm Hg systolic blood pressure and 70-100 mm Hg diastolic blood pressure) within 6 h with no adverse outcomes. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01912677, and the Clinical Trial Registry, India, number ctri/2013/08/003866.
Between April 1, 2015, and Aug 21, 2017, we screened 2307 women for their inclusion in the study. We excluded 1413 (61%) women who were ineligible, declined to participate, had impending eclampsia, were in active labour, or had a combination of these factors. 11 (4%) women in the nifedipine group, ten (3%) women in the labetalol group, and 11 (4%) women in the methyldopa group were ineligible for treatment (because they had only one qualifying blood pressure measurement) or had treatment stopped (because of delivery or transfer elsewhere). 894 (39%) women were randomly assigned to a treatment group and were included in the intention-to-treat analysis: 298 (33%) women were assigned to receive nifedipine, 295 (33%) women were assigned to receive labetalol, and 301 (33%) women were assigned to receive methyldopa. The primary outcome was significantly more common in women in the nifedipine group than in those in the methyldopa group (249 [84%] women vs 230 [76%] women; p=0·03). However, the primary outcome did not differ between the nifedipine and labetalol groups (249 [84%] women vs 228 [77%] women; p=0·05) or the labetalol and methyldopa groups (p=0·80). Seven serious adverse events (1% of births) were reported during the study: one (<1%) woman in the labetalol group had an intrapartum seizure and six (1%) neonates (one [<1%] neonate in the nifedipine group, two [1%] neonates in the labetalol group, and three [1%] neonates in the methyldopa group) were stillborn. No birth had more than one adverse event.
All oral antihypertensives reduced blood pressure to the reference range in most women. As single drugs, nifedipine retard use resulted in a greater frequency of primary outcome attainment than labetalol or methyldopa use. All three oral drugs-methyldopa, nifedipine, and labetalol-are viable initial options for treating severe hypertension in low-resource settings.
PREEMPT (University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; grantee of Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation).
高血压是妊娠中最常见的医学疾病,占十分之一的妊娠病例。为了降低母亲并发症的风险,广泛推荐治疗严重血压升高。急性治疗严重高血压的方案通常包括静脉内药物。尽管这些药物有效,但需要静脉通路和仔细的胎儿监测,在繁忙或资源有限的环境中可能不可行。因此,我们旨在比较三种口服药物,拉贝洛尔、硝苯地平控释片和甲基多巴,用于治疗妊娠中的严重高血压。
在这项多中心、平行组、开放性、随机对照试验中,我们在印度那格浦尔的两家公立医院比较了这些口服降压药。如果孕妇年龄至少 18 岁;胎儿达到至少 28 周的妊娠龄;需要药物控制严重高血压(收缩压≥160mmHg 或舒张压≥110mmHg);能够口服药物,则有资格参加试验。妇女随机分配接受 10mg 口服硝苯地平、200mg 口服拉贝洛尔(每小时,其中剂量可以升高,如果高血压持续)或 1000mg 甲基多巴(单次剂量,不升高剂量)。由于研究组的不同升级方案,参与者、研究调查人员和护理提供者无法对组分配进行掩蔽。主要结局是在 6 小时内血压控制(定义为收缩压 120-150mmHg,舒张压 70-100mmHg),且无不良结局。这项研究在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册,编号为 NCT01912677,在 Clinical Trial Registry,India,编号为 ctri/2013/08/003866。
2015 年 4 月 1 日至 2017 年 8 月 21 日,我们筛选了 2307 名妇女以确定其是否符合纳入研究标准。我们排除了 1413 名(61%)不符合条件、拒绝参加、即将发生子痫、正在活跃分娩或有上述因素组合的妇女。硝苯地平组有 11 名(4%)妇女、拉贝洛尔组有 10 名(3%)妇女和甲基多巴组有 11 名(4%)妇女因只有一次合格的血压测量而不适合治疗或因分娩或转移到其他地方而停止治疗。894 名(39%)妇女被随机分配到一个治疗组,并纳入意向治疗分析:298 名(33%)妇女被分配接受硝苯地平治疗,295 名(33%)妇女被分配接受拉贝洛尔治疗,301 名(33%)妇女被分配接受甲基多巴治疗。硝苯地平组的主要结局明显高于甲基多巴组(249[84%]名妇女 vs 230[76%]名妇女;p=0.03)。然而,硝苯地平组和拉贝洛尔组(249[84%]名妇女 vs 228[77%]名妇女;p=0.05)或拉贝洛尔组和甲基多巴组(p=0.80)的主要结局没有差异。研究期间报告了 7 例严重不良事件(1%的分娩):拉贝洛尔组有 1 例(<1%)妇女在分娩时发生癫痫发作,6 例(1%)新生儿(硝苯地平组 1 例<1%,拉贝洛尔组 2 例,甲基多巴组 3 例)死产。没有一个分娩有一个以上的不良事件。
所有口服降压药都使大多数妇女的血压降至参考范围。作为单一药物,硝苯地平控释片的主要结局发生率高于拉贝洛尔或甲基多巴。甲基多巴、硝苯地平、拉贝洛尔三种口服药物均为资源有限地区治疗严重高血压的初始有效选择。
PREEMPT(加拿大英属哥伦比亚大学温哥华分校;比尔和梅琳达盖茨基金会的受赠人)。