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Pre-eclampsia and Future Cardiovascular Health: An Underused Opportunity to Improve Family Health (FINNCARE)

H

Helsinki University Central Hospital (HUCH)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Pre-Eclampsia
Gestational Hypertension
Cardiovascular Diseases
Cardiovascular Risk Factor

Treatments

Behavioral: Face-to-face and web-based lifestyle intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04676295
FINNCARE

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background: PE (pre-eclampsia) is a common pregnancy-specific vascular hypertensive disease affecting 3-5% of pregnancies. PE independently increases the risk for premature cardiovascular disease (CVD) in mothers and their offspring long-term. PE provides a unique window for early risk profiling and CVD prevention. However, the efficacy of a family oriented lifestyle intervention to lower CVD risk in families with history of PE has not previously been evaluated.

Aim: This study will explore the impact of PE on CVD progression 8-12 years from delivery in mothers and their children, and assess whether a lifestyle intervention is useful for lowering mother and child blood pressure and improving the CVD risk profile overall in families with a history of PE.

Hypothesis: PE is related with CVD progression mediated by elevated blood pressure. Blood pressure and the CVD risk profile overall is modifiable in mothers and children by a 12-month behavioral lifestyle intervention in families with a history of PE.

Study design: Randomized controlled behavioral lifestyle intervention trial where families (mother, child and father from the FINNPEC study) are offered the opportunity to participate in a lifestyle intervention program 8-12 years after a PE pregnancy. 300 PE families will be randomized 1:1 to a 12-month lifestyle intervention program or to a control group. A parallel group of 100 non-PE control families will be assessed at baseline and follow-up.

Main outcome: 24 hour mean blood pressure change between baseline and follow-up in mother and child.

Significance: This study will provide information on CVD progression in mothers and children 8-12 years from a PE pregnancy. Furthermore, the study assess the effect of a 12-month lifestyle intervention on blood pressure and CVD risk profile overall following a PE pregnancy. Potentially, the study provides the opportunity to identify PE families at highest risk of CVD progression and families amenable to blood pressure and CVD risk profile improvement.

Full description

Power analysis:

Power calculations were performed in order to detect 5.5 mmHg reduction in maternal systolic blood pressure with a power of 80% and a 2-sided p-value of 0.05 for the difference between the groups (intervention and control PE) (NICE 2011). Accounting for a 20% loss to follow-up or missing data, a sample of 148 women in the PE intervention group and 148 women in the PE control group is needed.

Specific objectives:

  1. To assess cardiovascular health and CVD progression in families (mother, child and father) 8-12 years following a PE pregnancy compared with non-PE control families.
  2. To assess the effectiveness of a behavioral 12-month lifestyle intervention in mothers and their children 8-12 years following a PE pregnancy to lower blood pressure and improve their CVD risk profile overall.
  3. To assess the effectiveness of a lifestyle intervention on the awareness of CVD risk after a PE pregnancy.

Enrollment

400 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Families are recruited from the FINNPEC cohort. In FINNPEC, PE was defined as hypertension and proteinuria occurring after 20 weeks gestation (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists 2002 criteria). Hypertension was defined as systolic blood pressure ≥140 mm Hg or diastolic blood pressure ≥90 mm Hg. Proteinuria was defined as urinary excretion of ≥0.3 g protein in a 24-hour specimen, or 0.3 g/L, or two ≥1+ readings on a dipstick in a random urine determination with no evidence of a urinary tract infection. Each PE diagnosis was ascertained based on hospital records and confirmed independently by a research nurse and a study physician in the original FINNPEC case-control study including 1450 nulliparous or multiparous women with a singleton pregnancy with PE and 1065 pregnant control women without PE (aged 18-47 years) from all 5 university hospitals in Finland during 2008-2011.

Exclusion criteria in the FINNPEC: multiple pregnancy, inability to speak Finnish or Swedish.

Exclusion Criteria in the FINNCARE:

  • Pregnancy and/or lactation (for all mothers)
  • Pre-eclampsia in any previous or subsequent pregnancies (for all non-PE mothers)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

400 participants in 3 patient groups

PE intervention
Experimental group
Description:
A 12-month lifestyle intervention program to improve mothers and their children blood pressure and CVD risk profile.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Face-to-face and web-based lifestyle intervention
PE control
No Intervention group
Description:
The control group continue habitual lifestyle but will perform the same baseline and follow-up measurements as the intervention group. They will be given general written information on healthy eating.
Non-PE control
No Intervention group
Description:
The control group continue habitual lifestyle but will perform the same baseline and follow-up measurements as the intervention group. They will be given general written information on healthy eating.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Tiina Jääskeläinen, PhD; Taisto Sarkola, PhD, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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