Bernardes2019 PDF
Bernardes2019 PDF
Bernardes2019 PDF
Thomas P. Bernardes, Ben W. Mol, Anita C.J. Ravelli, Paul P. van den Berg,
H. Marike Boezen, Henk Groen
PII: S2210-7789(17)30452-X
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.preghy.2018.10.010
Reference: PREGHY 523
Please cite this article as: Bernardes, T.P., Mol, B.W., Ravelli, A.C.J., van den Berg, P.P., Marike Boezen, H., Groen,
H., Recurrence risk of preeclampsia in a linked population-based cohort: effects of first pregnancy maximum
diastolic blood pressure and gestational age, Pregnancy Hypertension: An International Journal of Women's
Cardiovascular Health (2018), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.preghy.2018.10.010
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1 Title
2 Recurrence risk of preeclampsia in a linked population-based cohort: effects of first pregnancy
3 maximum diastolic blood pressure and gestational age.
4
5 Authors
6 Thomas P. BERNARDES, MD; Ben W. MOL, PhD; Anita C.J.
7 RAVELLI, PhD; Paul P. VAN DEN BERG, PhD; H. Marike BOEZEN,
8 PhD; Henk GROEN, PhD.
9
10 Author details
11 Thomas P. Bernardes, MD. Department of Epidemiology, University
12 of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Hanzeplein 1,
13 9713 GZ Groningen, The Netherlands.
14 E: [email protected] T: 050 361 0738
15
16 Ben W. Mol, PhD. Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Monash University.
17 Scenic Blvd & Wellington Road, Clayton VIC 3800, Australia.
18 E: [email protected]
19
20 Anita C.J. Ravelli, PhD. Department of Medical Informatics, Academic
21 Medical Center, Meibergdreef 9, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The
22 Netherlands. E: [email protected] T: 020 566 4624
23
24 Paul P. van den Berg, PhD. Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology,
25 University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen,
26 Hanzeplein 1, 9713 GZ Groningen, The Netherlands.
27 E: [email protected] T: 050 361 0374
28
29 H. Marike Boezen, PhD. Department 25 of Epidemiology, University of
30 Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Hanzeplein 1, 9713
31 GZ Groningen, The Netherlands.
32 E: [email protected] T: 050 361 0739
33
34 Henk Groen, PhD. Department of Epidemiology, University of
35 Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Hanzeplein 1, 9713
36 GZ Groningen, The Netherlands.
37 E: [email protected] T: 050 361 0738
38
39 Disclosure Statement
40 The authors report no conflict of interest.
41
42 Presentation
43 These findings were orally presented at the 20th World Congress of the International Society for the Study of
44 Hypertension in Pregnancy (ISSHP), October 24th, 2016.
45
46 Funding Source
47 None
48
49 Abstract and Main Text Word Count
50 267 and 3214
51
52 Short Title
53 Pre-eclampsia recurrence: blood pressure matters.
54
55 Recurrence risk of preeclampsia in a linked population-based cohort: effects of first pregnancy maximum
56 diastolic blood pressure and gestational age.
57
58 AUTHORS:
59
60 Thomas P Bernardesa, Ben W. Mold, Anita C.J Ravellic, Paul P. van den Bergb, H. Marike Boezena, Henk Groena
61
62 INSTITUTIONS (ALL):
63
64 a. Epidemiology, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
65 b. Obstetrics & Gynecology, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands.
66 c. Medical Informatics, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
67 d. Obstetrics & Gynecology, Monash University, Clayton, Australia
68
69 Objective: To estimate preeclampsia occurrence and recurrence risk in the 2nd pregnancy and analyze associated
70 risk factors such as 1st pregnancy maximum diastolic blood pressure (maxDBP) and gestational age at delivery (GA).
71
72 Study Design: Linked cohort of 1st and 2nd pregnancies of 272,551 women from the Dutch Perinatal Registry
73 collected between 2000 and 2007. We defined preeclampsia as hypertension (maxDBP ≥ 90 mmHg or documented
74 hypertension) plus proteinuria (≥ 300mg / 24h) and analyzed its 2nd pregnancy occurrence with logistic regression.
75 Early and late onset preeclampsia were defined by delivery before and after the 34th week, respectively.
76
77 Results: Preeclampsia prevalences in the 1st and 2nd pregnancies were 2.5% and 0.9%, respectively. Women with
78 prior preeclampsia had a 10.5% risk of recurrence. For women with term 1st pregnancies and maxDBP <80 mmHg,
79 the 2nd pregnancy preeclampsia rate was 0.2% (95% CI 0.17%—0.23%), while for those whom presented maxDBP
80 ≥110 mmHg it was 4.2% (95% CI 3.6%—4.8%). First pregnancy late onset preeclampsia was associated with
81 increased preeclampsia recurrence risk proportional to 1st pregnancy maxDBP: in women with a maxDBP between
82 100 and 109 mmHg the recurrence risk was 8.3%, while for women with a maxDBP ≥110 mmHg this risk was 11%
83 (difference 2.7%; 95% CI 1.0%—4.4%). In 1st pregnancy early onset preeclampsia corresponding rates were 14.8%
85
86 Conclusion: Preeclampsia recurrence risk is 10%. Preeclampsia risk in the 2nd pregnancy increases proportionally to
87 1st pregnancy maxDBP. Earlier onsets of 1st pregnancy preeclampsia further increase recurrence risk.
88
89 Introduction
90 Preeclampsia is a major contributor to maternal and fetal morbidity that affects approximately 3% of all
91 pregnancies[1]. Although its incidence is highest in the first pregnancy, recurrence is still an important problem with
92 estimates ranging from 12% to 38% [2–6]. A wide variety of factors such as previous early onset preeclampsia,
93 preterm delivery, preeclampsia with severe features and maternal preexisting disease have been proposed as risk
94 factors for preeclampsia which may help explain the wide range in recurrence rates [1,3,4,7,8]. In any case, once
95 preeclampsia occurs, appropriate counseling targeted at patient reassurance and need for information about future
96 pregnancies becomes paramount, as well as a better assessment of pertinent risk factors for the individual patient is
97 required.
98 Considerable effort has recently been put forth in studying the effects of increasingly higher blood pressure
99 levels during pregnancy on maternal and neonatal outcomes. In the CHIPS trial, severe hypertension was associated
100 with poorer outcomes for newborns in both tight and less-tight blood pressure control groups as well as with poorer
101 maternal outcomes in the less-tight group, such as increased risk of acute stroke during and post pregnancy, but
102 follow-up into the next pregnancy was not performed [9–11]. On the other hand, the effects of different hypertension
103 levels on subsequent pregnancies have so far been left unexplored in the literature.
104 Therefore, in this study we analyzed preeclampsia recurrence and 2nd pregnancy preeclampsia occurrence
105 risks in a large cohort of the Dutch population using the longitudinal Netherlands Perinatal Registry (Perined) records.
106 This population cohort allowed us to evaluate the influence of several factors previously suggested in the literature as
107 well as that of gradually higher levels of pregnancy maximum diastolic blood pressure (maxDBP), which we
108 hypothesized to be useful in further distinguishing patients in low or high risk of preeclampsia in a subsequent
109 pregnancy.
110 Methods
111 This study is based on a nationwide prospective cohort dataset extracted from Perined, the result of a
112 validated linkage of three different registries: the midwifery registry (LVR1), the obstetrics registry (LVR2), and the
113 neonatology registry (LNR). It consists of population-based data that covers approximately 96% of all deliveries in the
114 Netherlands and contains information on pregnancies, deliveries and admissions until 28 days after birth.
115 Perined data is recorded at the child’s level and there is no unique maternal identifier to correlate siblings and
116 follow up on subsequent pregnancies. Because of this, we submitted the data on all available 509,559 second
117 deliveries from 2000 to 2007 to a linkage procedure based on the variables birth date of mother, birth date of previous
118 child, and postal code of mother. The final linked cohort contained data on the first and second deliveries of 272,551
119 women. Further information on the linkage procedure can be found elsewhere[12].
120 Preeclampsia was defined by the combined presence of hypertension (either maximum diastolic blood
121 pressure ≥ 90 mm Hg or documented hypertension by the care provider) and proteinuria (≥300 mg in 24 hours).
122 Chronic hypertension was defined by hypertension diagnosed before pregnancy or new onset hypertension before 20
123 weeks of pregnancy following the Dutch guidelines for hypertension in pregnancy (blood pressure ≥ 140/90 mmHg)
124 and documented by the care provider, either a midwife or obstetrician. We also included obstetrician documented
125 records of preeclampsia and eclampsia in the Perined database, as well as women with chronic hypertension that
126 presented proteinuria (≥300 mg in 24 hours). In the Dutch perinatal system, blood pressure measurements are
127 performed at every outpatient visit to the care provider and multiple times peripartum. While individual measurements
128 are not recorded in the dataset, the maximum diastolic pressure available in the dataset is based on these
129 measurements. The gestational age at which the highest blood pressure occurred is not recorded. Early onset
130 preeclampsia was characterized by delivery before 34 weeks in cases with preeclampsia. Late onset preeclampsia
131 was defined as preeclampsia cases delivered from the 34th week on.
132 We compared women who developed preeclampsia in their first pregnancy to those who did not according to
133 their respective baseline demographic, clinical and obstetric characteristics. The analyzed characteristics were:
134 maximum diastolic blood pressure (mmHg), maternal age (years), Caucasian maternal ethnicity (native Dutch and
135 other white women or different ethnic groups such as African/Surinamese, South Asian, Moroccan and Turkish), low
136 socioeconomic status (postal code area with lowest quartile score based on income level, paid job percentage, and
137 education level), chronic hypertension (yes or no), diabetes (yes or no), interpregnancy interval (years), GA at delivery
138 (weeks) and multiple pregnancy (yes or no). The choice of covariates in this study was based on pre-test clinical
140 To investigate the effects of GA at delivery in the 1st pregnancy to the preeclampsia risk in the 2nd pregnancy,
141 we further divided the two groups in three categories: extreme preterm (22+0-29+6 weeks gestation), early preterm
142 (30+0-33+6 weeks gestation) and late preterm (34+0-36+6 weeks gestation). In the same manner, we also divided the
143 two groups in categories according to their maxDBP in the 1st pregnancy: <80 mmHg, 80-89 mmHg, 90-99 mmHg,
144 100-109 mmHg and ≥110 mmHg. The variable for maximum diastolic blood pressure had 27.8% of missing values
145 and no other covariates evaluated in the logistic regressions had missing values. To avoid potential bias introduced by
146 listwise deletion of these cases in the logistic regressions, we performed a multiple imputation procedure with the aim
147 of producing unbiased estimates as we assumed no systematic error in the registry. We generated five imputed sets
148 using predictive mean matching and the following 1st and 2nd pregnancy variables: preeclampsia (yes or no),
149 hypertension during pregnancy (yes or no), GA (weeks), gestational diabetes (yes or no), multiple pregnancy (yes or
150 no), maternal age (years), birthweight (grams), maxDBP (mmHg), 5th percentile small for GA (yes or no), spontaneous
151 birth (yes or no). In addition, we used the following demographic and clinical variables: low socioeconomic status (yes
152 or no), ethnicity (Caucasian or not), chronic hypertension (yes or no) and diabetes (yes or no).
153 Student’s t or Mann-Whitney U tests were used in the statistical analyzes of continuous data. Categorical data
154 were analyzed with chi-squared tests, and confidence intervals for proportions were found using the Wilson score
155 interval[13]. To assess preeclampsia risk, we used logistic regression to adjust the odds ratios to differences in
156 baseline characteristics and study the influence of maxDBPs and different GAs at delivery. We assessed potential
157 interaction effects between preeclampsia occurrence and maximum diastolic blood pressure. Evidence of interaction
158 effects was first evaluated by product terms. To obtain the relevant point estimates and generate appropriate
159 confidence intervals for interaction effects, we followed the alternative coding scheme initially proposed by Rothman
160 and further developed by Hosmer & Lemeshow [14]. In this approach, interaction between two risk factors (A and B) is
161 evaluated through a single four level variable (-A-B, +A-B, -A+B, +A+B), with no loss of degrees of freedom. Point
162 estimates for each combination and associated confidence intervals are then readily available in the output of most
163 statistics software. Univariate models were run for each of the studied variables and compared to the fully adjusted
164 model. Odds ratios obtained from the five multiple imputation sets were pooled following Rubin’s rules[15]. The
165 linkage procedure was performed using the R statistical software environment (version 2.13.1; R Foundation for
166 Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria). The multiple imputation procedure was performed, and the data were
167 analyzed with IBM SPSS Statistics software (version 20.0.0; IBM Corporation).
168 Results
169 A total of 509,559 second deliveries were available for analyses. From this total we matched 272,551 (53%) to
170 the corresponding first delivery. Of these, a total of 6,679 (2.4%) women developed preeclampsia in the 1st
171 pregnancy, versus 2548 (0.9%) in the 2nd pregnancy. There were 702 women who presented preeclampsia in both
172 pregnancies, a recurrence rate of 10.5% (95% CI 9.8% - 11.2%). Conversely, de novo preeclampsia in the 2nd
173 pregnancy occurred in 1846 (72.4%) of the women. Of this group, 60% had presented gestational or chronic
174 hypertension but not preeclampsia in the 1st pregnancy. Only 28% of the women that developed preeclampsia in the
176 We present baseline characteristics of the two comparison groups in Table 1. Maternal ages were
177 comparable, as well as the number of Caucasians and women with low socioeconomic status in each group. Women
178 that did not present preeclampsia were less likely to have diabetes (0.9% vs 2.1%; p-value < 0.0001), chronic
179 hypertension (0.9% vs 6.7%; p-value < 0.0001), and to have a multiple pregnancy (0.8% vs 2.6%; p-value < 0.0001).
180 Women who presented preeclampsia had slightly higher interpregnancy intervals (2.5 years ± 1.2 vs 2.7 ± 1.3; p-value
181 < 0.0001). Mean GAs were lower in women with preeclampsia (39.2 ± 2.2 vs 37.1 ± 3.0; p-value < 0.0001).
182 In the 1st pregnancy, 3357 (50.3%) preeclampsia occurrences were identified because of proteinuria and
183 documented hypertension (yes or no), 1112 (16.6%) because of proteinuria and maximum diastolic blood pressure
184 higher or equal to 90 mm Hg, and 2204 (33,0%) were identified through the obstetrician records in the Perined
185 database. Of the 2728 women with documented chronic hypertension, 454 (16,6%) presented proteinuria, and 6 of
186 these did not fill any of the other criteria for preeclampsia. In the 2nd pregnancy preeclampsia occurrences were
187 identified in the same way and the respective numbers are as follows: 873 (34,2%), 1010 (39,6%) and 662 (25,9%).
188 Superimposed preeclampsia in the 2nd pregnancy occurred in 222 (8.1%) women. Three did not fill the other criteria
189 and were identified through documented proteinuria and chronic hypertension.
190 Figure 1 presents the risk of preeclampsia in the 2nd pregnancy in relation to different levels of
191 maxDBP in the 1st pregnancy, GA at delivery and history of preeclampsia. The presence of severe hypertension
192 (maxDBP ≥ 110 mmHg) in late onset 1st pregnancy preeclampsia was associated with a 11% rate of recurrence,
193 significantly higher than the 8.3% rate found for preeclamptic women whose maximum DPB levels were between 100
194 and 109 mmHg. A similar tendency was observed in women with early onset preeclampsia, although the smaller
195 incidence resulted in overlapping confidence intervals. While the recurrence rate of those with maxDBP equal or
196 above 110 mmHg after early onset preeclampsia was 19.3%, the rates of those within the 90-99 and 100-109 mmHg
198 As expected, women with term 1st pregnancies and low levels of maxDBP (<80 mmHg) had a very low risk of
199 preeclampsia in the 2nd pregnancy: 0.20% (95% CI 0.17% - 0.23%). Increased but still normal levels of maxDBP of 80-
200 89 mmHg more than doubled this risk to 0.42% (95% CI 0.39% - 0.46%). Severe hypertension and no preeclampsia in
201 these pregnancies raised 2nd pregnancy preeclampsia risk to 4.1% (95% CI 3.6% - 4.8%).
202 Table 2 presents the results of the logistic regressions with preeclampsia in the 2nd pregnancy as the
203 outcome. Increasing levels of maxDBP in the 1st pregnancy were associated with increased risks of preeclampsia in
204 the 2nd pregnancy for women without prior history of preeclampsia. Slightly elevated but not hypertensive levels of
205 maxDBP were already associated with increased risks: women with levels between 80 and 89 mmHg had an adjusted
206 odds ratio (aOR) of 2.3 (95% CI 1.9 - 2.7) for the occurrence of preeclampsia in the following pregnancy. Levels equal
207 or above 110 mmHg were associated with higher risks, with an aOR of 20.7 (95% CI: 16.7 - 25.6).
208 Preeclampsia history was identified as the main risk factor for recurrence. The aOR associated with severe
209 hypertensive cases (≥110 mmHg) was 43.1 (95% CI 35.5 - 52.5). This risk is compounded by earlier preterm
210 deliveries as these were also associated with increasing rates of 2nd pregnancy preeclampsia. The group of women
211 whose 1st pregnancy ended before 30 weeks had an aOR of 3.9 (95% CI 3.2 - 4.8), and the risk gradually decreased
213 Women with chronic hypertension were at increased risk of superimposed preeclampsia in the 2nd pregnancy
214 with an aOR of 2.3 (95% CI: 2.0 - 2.7). History of preeclampsia in women with chronic hypertension resulted in a
215 21.4% chance of recurrence on the 2nd pregnancy, as opposed to 5.5% for those with only chronic hypertension
216 (difference 15.9%; 95% CI 12.2% - 19.9%). Women with diabetes were also at increased risk as their aOR was 1.8
217 (95% CI: 1.4 - 2.3). Prior preeclampsia and diabetes resulted in a 2nd pregnancy preeclampsia risk of 15.5%, while for
218 isolated diabetes the risk to 1.8% (difference 13.7%; 95% CI 8.6% - 20.5%).
219 In the univariate regression, a multiple 1st pregnancy was associated with increased preeclampsia risk in the
220 2nd pregnancy with an OR of 1.5 (95% CI 1.2 - 1.8). However, in the multivariate model there was an apparent
221 protective effect as the aOR was 0.6 (0.4 - 0.9). Stepwise adjustment of the univariate regression to additionally
222 account for the effects of 1st pregnancy GA at delivery is enough to reverse the effect of a multiple 1st pregnancy from
223 increased to lower risk of preeclampsia in the 2nd pregnancy (aOR 0.6; 95% CI 0.5 - 0.7). On the other hand, if the 2nd
224 pregnancy was a multiple pregnancy, risk of preeclampsia was higher (aOR: 3.8; 95% CI 3.2 - 4.5). Supplemental
225 tables S1 and S2 show the results of the regression analyses without use of imputed data and with Perined identified
227
228 Discussion
229 We investigated the recurrence risk of preeclampsia and additional risk factors for its occurrence in 2nd
230 pregnancies. Our main findings are that the maxDBP in the 1st pregnancy is directly proportional to preeclampsia risk
231 in the 2nd pregnancy for women with no history of preeclampsia, and that GA at delivery is inversely proportional to
232 this risk. We were also able to confirm that preeclampsia history is a major risk factor although there is no clear
233 evidence that the degree of hypertension presented by itself further increases preeclampsia risk in the 2nd pregnancy.
234 Based on a retrospective cohort of 211 subsequent deliveries it was previously reported that increasing levels
235 of hypertension in an early onset preeclamptic 1st pregnancy increased early onset 2nd pregnancy preeclampsia
236 risk[16]. Our results do not support this claim as risk confidence intervals found over different levels of hypertension
237 overlapped considerably for women with history of preeclampsia. Additionally, three previous studies identified preterm
238 birth as a risk factor for preeclampsia in the 2nd pregnancy. Two of them were based on large cohorts and our results
239 are consistent with them, although only one of the three reported on increased risks beyond very early preterm
240 delivery as we did[3,7]. Reporting conflicting results, van Rijn et al found recurrence rates for preeclampsia not related
241 to delivery before 28 weeks of gestation in 120 hospital-based subsequent pregnancies [2].
242 Although chronic hypertension is generally identified as a risk factor for preeclampsia, the literature presents
243 conflicting results regarding its effect on recurrence risk. Sibai et al studied 369 women with chronic hypertension and
244 concluded that a history of preeclampsia did not increase rates of superimposed preeclampsia[17]. On the other hand,
245 Langenveld et al. and van Rijn et al. reported higher recurrence risk in women with chronic hypertension[2,16]. Our
247 We performed our study on data from Perined. The registry covers approximately 96% of all pregnancy and
248 birth characteristics of the country. No a priori power calculation was performed due to the large sample size available.
249 We were unfortunately unable to adjust for certain factors such as BMI, smoking, medication use (such as aspirin and
250 anti-hypertensive drugs), pre-existing vascular and kidney disease, history of thrombophilia, paternal influence and
251 family history of preeclampsia as these are either not contained in Perined or severely underreported. Furthermore,
252 there is likely underreporting of diabetes mellitus and chronic hypertension[18,19]. These results are based on a
253 population-based cohort and consequently women in all BMI ranges, smokers or not, with or without family history of
254 preeclampsia and other known preeclampsia risk factors were included. This makes it unlikely that non-inclusion of
255 these compromises the significance of our results because of the large effect sizes found.
256 Of these, BMI is the most relevant as, although the effect size associated with obesity is usually lower than
257 that of chronic hypertension, it is widely more prevalent. Obesity rates in women of reproductive age in most
258 developed countries range from 14 to 20%, reaching up to 60% in some countries. These account worldwide for about
259 30% of the preeclampsia cases [20–24]. As modifiable risk factors, effects on preeclampsia risks in a subsequent
260 pregnancy imposed by high pre-pregnancy BMI as well as gestational weight gain in the index gestation are of
261 interest. Whether these effects are causal or representative of a system prone both to metabolic syndrome and
262 preeclampsia, and whether BMI reduction in the interpregnancy interval would be enough to lessen the associated risk
264 As we were interested in the preeclampsia risk in a subsequent pregnancy, a probabilistic linkage procedure
265 was performed to identify siblings and the characteristics of their pregnancies and deliveries. Failure to match was
266 because of missing values on the linkage variables or a first delivery prior to 1999. Changes in the home address also
267 resulted in non-linkage as “postal code of mother” was one of the linkage variables. The linked dataset was
268 comparable to the Dutch national data on both demographic characteristics and obstetric outcomes [25]. The
269 prevalence of preeclampsia in the 1st pregnancy in our database is most likely underestimated as women that only
270 had one child are not part of the longitudinal database. A large Swedish cohort reported an overall preeclampsia rate
271 of 4.1% that dropped to 3.9% if these women were excluded [7].
272 Systolic blood pressure is not available in the dataset. This restricted our definition of preeclampsia which may
273 have further lowered preeclampsia prevalence in our study. Perined’s independent recording of preeclampsia and
274 eclampsia occurrences, which we made use of, in association with the inclusion of cases of documented hypertension
275 and proteinuria mitigate this issue as women with preeclampsia limited to systolic blood pressure hypertension were
276 counted in. Our sensitivity analysis showed consistent results when the model was restricted to these cases only.
277 Similarly, the inclusion of proteinuria as a criterion in the preeclampsia definition was standard practice over the years
279 The recent increase in the use of aspirin during pregnancy has benefited women at high risk for preeclampsia
280 [27]. The US Preventive Task Force defines this high risk group as women who present with a history of
281 preeclampsia, multifetal gestation, chronic hypertension, diabetes, renal or autoimmune disease[28]. Our results
282 indicate that women with elevated maxDBP in their 1st pregnancy have a preeclampsia risk at least in the same order
283 of magnitude as women in this high-risk group, whether they developed preeclampsia or not. As there is evidence that
284 the intervention causes little harm to those without contraindications, and that the potential benefit is substantial, it is
285 worth considering high diastolic blood pressure in a previous pregnancy as a risk factor for which the recommendation
286 to use of aspirin from the 12th week of gestation may be advisable.
287
288 Conclusion
289 We found that the degree of severity of hypertension in the 1st pregnancy has direct relation to preeclampsia
290 rates in the 2nd pregnancy in women with no preeclampsia history. Previous preeclampsia remains the biggest risk
291 factor for preeclampsia in a subsequent pregnancy. Furthermore, low 1st pregnancy GAs at delivery further increase
292 preeclampsia risk in the 2nd pregnancy. These findings improve the awareness of individual risks of occurrence and
294
295
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400
Table 1
Baseline maternal characteristics at 1st pregnancy delivery
No preeclampsia Preeclampsia p
(n=265872) (n=6679) value
Maternal age, years† 28.6 ± 4.2 28.5 ± 4.4 0.362
Interpregnancy interval, years† 2.5 ± 1.2 2.7 ± 1.2 <.0001
GA at delivery, weeks† 39.2 ± 2.2 37.1 ± 3.0 <.0001
Caucasian, n (%) 232,101 (87.3) 5872 (87.9) 0.133
Low socioeconomic status, n (%) 71,258 (26.8) 1753 (26.2) 0.548
Chronic Hypertension, n (%) 2,274 (0.9) 454 (6.8) <.0001
Diabetes, n (%) 2,561 (1.0) 142 (2.1) <.0001
Multiple pregnancy, n (%) 2,018 (0.8) 172 (2.6) <.0001
† Given as mean ± SD.
401
Table 2
Risk factors for preeclampsia in the second pregnancy.
Adjusted
First pregnancy n N % Odds ratio (95% CI)
Odds ratio (95% CI) †
402
Table S1
Risk factors for preeclampsia in the second pregnancy — no imputed data.
Adjusted
First pregnancy n N % Odds ratio (95% CI)
Odds ratio (95% CI) †
Adjusted
First pregnancy n N % Odds ratio (95% CI)
Odds ratio (95% CI) †
405
406 Figure 1 caption
407
408 Title
409 Figure 1. Rate of 2nd pregnancy PE by 1st pregnancy maxDBP, GA at delivery and PE
410 occurrence.
411 Description
412 Rate of 2nd pregnancy preeclampsia and 95% confidence interval by 1 st pregnancy
413 gestational age at delivery (weeks), preeclampsia occurrence and maximum diastolic blood
414 pressure (mmHg).
415 Abbreviations
421
422 Highlights
426
427