| Literature DB >> 15833147 |
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is now good evidence that antiplatelet agents (principally low dose aspirin) prevent pre-eclampsia, a leading cause of morbidity and mortality for pregnant women and their babies. A Cochrane Review identified moderate, but clinically important, reductions in the relative risks of pre-eclampsia (19%), preterm birth (7%) and perinatal mortality (16%) in women allocated antiplatelets, rather than placebo or no antiplatelet.Uncertainty remains, however, about whether some women (in terms of risk) benefit more than others, what dose of aspirin is best and when in pregnancy treatment should ideally start. Rather than undertake new trials, the best way to answer these questions is to utilise existing individual patient data from women enrolled in each trial. METHODS/Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15833147 PMCID: PMC555958 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-5-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Key definitions for enrolment characteristics
| gestational hypertension | |
| severe hypertension | systolic BP ≥ 160 mmHg |
| proteinuria | ≥ 1+ on dipstick, |
| pre-eclampsia (for women normotensive at trial entry) | |
| pre-eclampsia (for women with chronic hypertension at trial entry) | new-onset proteinuria as described above |
| pre-eclampsia (for women with chronic hypertension and proteinuria at trial entry) | signs and symptoms of superimposed pre-eclampsia after 20 weeks' gestation, for example worsening of hypertension or proteinuria |
| early onset proteinuria | proteinuria as defined above, occurring ≤ 33 weeks + 6 days of gestation |
| early onset pre-eclampsia | hypertension and early onset proteinuria as described above |
| chronic hypertension | |
| intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) | growth below the 3rd centile, |
| miscarriage / fetal death | any death in utero |
| perinatal death | death in utero or within the first 7 days of life |
| neonatal death | live born and any reported death within the first 28 days |
Key definitions for outcome measures
| pre-eclampsia | as defined in Table 1 |
| pregnancy loss / neonatal death | miscarriage, fetal death or death of a liveborn infant before hospital discharge |
| pre-term birth | |
| small for gestational age (SGA) infant | infant with birth-weight below the 3rd centile, |
| pregnancy with serious adverse outcome | pregnancy with any of the above main outcomes for the woman or any fetus/baby, or the death of the woman. If sufficient data available, severe maternal morbidity will also be included in this definition. |
| early onset pre-eclampsia | as defined in Table 1 |
| maternal death | death during pregnancy or up to 42 days after termination of the pregnancy |
| antepartum haemorrhage | any vaginal bleeding before the onset of labour |
| placental abruption | clear evidence of placental separation |
| severe maternal morbidity | including eclampsia, HELLP syndrome, DIC, pulmonary oedema, liver failure, renal failure or CVA/stroke |
| infant death | live born and any reported death from 29 days to 1 year of life or after hospital discharge |
| neonatal bleeding | abnormal bleeding in the neonatal period including periventricular haemorrhage, gastrointestinal, umbilical or other sites |