4.1 Article

Expectant Management of Severe Preeclampsia Remote from Term: A Structured Systematic Review

期刊

HYPERTENSION IN PREGNANCY
卷 28, 期 3, 页码 312-347

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10641950802601252

关键词

Maternal morbidity and mortality; Preeclampsia; Perinatal morbidity and mortality

资金

  1. Centre de Recherche Medicale de l'Universite de Sherbrooke
  2. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research (MSFHR)
  3. Child and Family Institute (CFRI) of British Columbia

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Objective: To compare outcomes associated with expectant vs. interventionist care of severe preeclampsia in observational studies. Data Sources: Medline (01/1980-07/2007), bibliographies of retrieved papers, personal files, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. Study Selection: Expectant or interventionist care of preeclampsia at <34 wk. Tabulation, Integration, Results: Data abstraction independently by two reviewers. Median [IQR] of clinical maternal/perinatal outcomes presented. Results: 72 publications, primarily from tertiary care centres in Dutch and developed world sites. Expectant care of severe preeclampsia <34 wk (39 cohorts, 4,650 women), for which 40% of women are eligible, is associated with pregnancy prolongation of 7-14 d, and few serious maternal complications (median <5%), similar to interventionist care (2 studies, 42 women). Complication rates are higher with HELLP <34wk (12 cohorts, 438 women) and severe preeclampsia <28wk (6 cohorts, 305 women), similar to interventionist care (6 cohorts, 467 women and 2 cohorts, 70 women, respectively). Expectant care of HELLP <34 wk (12 cohorts, 438 women) is associated with fewer days gained (median 5), but more serious maternal morbidity (e.g., eclampsia, median 15%). More than half of women have at least temporary improvement of HELLP. In the developed world, expectant (vs. interventionist) care of severe preeclampsia or HELLP <34 wk is associated with reduced neonatal death and complications. Stillbirth is higher in Dutch and developing world sites where viability thresholds are higher. For preeclampsia <24wk (4 cohorts), perinatal mortality is >80%. No predictors of adverse maternal/perinatal outcomes were identified (13 studies). Conclusions: Future research should establish the best maternal/fetal monitoring regimen and indications for delivery with expectant care. A definitive RCT is needed.

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