| Literature DB >> 25636341 |
Elisabeth Pasquier1, Luc de Saint Martin1, Caroline Bohec2, Céline Chauleur3, Florence Bretelle4, Gisèle Marhic5, Grégoire Le Gal6, Véronique Debarge7, Frédéric Lecomte8, Christine Denoual-Ziad9, Véronique Lejeune-Saada10, Serge Douvier11, Michel Heisert12, Dominique Mottier6.
Abstract
It is common practice in many centers to offer antithrombotic medications to women with unexplained recurrent miscarriage, in the presence or absence of inherited thrombophilia. Although no benefit of aspirin vs placebo has been clearly demonstrated, a double-blind placebo-controlled trial on the effect of low-molecular-weight heparin is lacking. We enrolled 258 pregnant women with a history of unexplained recurrent miscarriage (≥2 consecutive miscarriages before 15 weeks' gestation) and a negative thrombophilia workup. They were randomly assigned to receive one daily subcutaneous injection of enoxaparin 40 mg or placebo until 35 weeks' gestation. We included 256 women (mean age 32 years, ≥3 miscarriages: 72%; mean gestational age 39 days of amenorrhea) in the intention-to-treat analysis; 66.6% of 138 who received enoxaparin had a live birth vs 72.9% of 118 who received placebo. The absolute difference was -6% (95% CI, -17.1 to 5.1), excluding a 10% increase in the rate of live-birth on enoxaparin (P = .34). In this first randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, enoxaparin (40 mg once daily) did not improve the chance of a live birth in nonthrombophilic women with unexplained recurrent miscarriage. This trial is registered at www.ClinicalTrials.gov as #NCT00740545 and the French National Health and Drug Safety Agency (EudraCT #2006-003350-18).Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25636341 PMCID: PMC4432556 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2014-11-610857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113