4.2 Article

Comparing the efficacy of oral labetalol with oral amlodipine in achieving blood pressure control in women with postpartum hypertension: randomized controlled trial (HIPPO study-Hypertension In Pregnancy & Postpartum Oral-antihypertensive therapy)

Journal

JOURNAL OF HUMAN HYPERTENSION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41371-023-00841-x

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

De novo or as a continuum of antenatal hypertension, postpartum hypertension affects about 2% of pregnancies and can lead to maternal complications. This study compared the effectiveness of oral Labetalol and oral Amlodipine in controlling blood pressure in postpartum women. The results showed that Amlodipine achieved sustained blood pressure control faster and had fewer hypertensive emergencies compared to Labetalol. However, more women in the Amlodipine group still required antihypertensive medication at discharge. No drug-related side effects were observed. (CTRI/2020/02/023236).
De novo - or as a continuum of antenatal hypertension -postpartum hypertension complicates similar to 2% of pregnancies. Many maternal complications, such as eclampsia and cerebrovascular accidents, occur in the postpartum period. Despite widespread use of antihypertensives during pregnancy and childbirth, there is a paucity of data on preferred medications in the postpartum period. This randomized controlled study enrolled 130 women who were started on antihypertensives. They were randomized to receive oral Labetalol(LAB, maximum 900 mg per day in three doses) or oral Amlodipine(AML, maximum 10 mg per day given in two doses). In the immediate postpartum, all women were closely monitored for neurological symptoms, blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, urine output, and deep tendon reflex. The primary outcome was the time to achieve sustained blood pressure control for 12 h from the initiation of medication; secondary outcomes included side effects of both medications. Mean time to achieve sustained blood pressure control was lower in women who received AML than in those who received LAB-(mean difference 7.2 h; 38 95% CI 1.4, 12.9, p = 0.011). There were fewer severe hypertensive episodes among those with AML than in those who received LAB. However, the proportion of women who continued to require antihypertensives at discharge was higher in the AML group than in the LAB group (55.4% versus 32.3%, p = 0.008). None of the participants developed drug-related side effects. Among women with postpartum persistence or new-onset hypertension, oral AML achieved sustained blood pressure control in a shorter duration, with fewer hypertensive emergencies than oral LAB. (CTRI/2020/02/023236).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available