Two studies, published together on bmj.com, add further
weight to the theory that pre-eclampsia and cardiovascular diseases may
share common causes or mechanisms.
The first study finds that women who have had pre-eclampsia during pregnancy
have a more than two fold higher risk of heart disease in later life, while
the second shows that women with cardiovascular risk factors that are
present years before pregnancy may be predisposed to pre-eclampsia.
Pre-eclampsia is a serious condition where abnormally high blood pressure
and other disturbances develop in the second half of pregnancy. It affects
about 5% of all first-time pregnancies and is dangerous for both mother and
child.
In the first study, researchers in London analysed 25 studies involving over
3 million women to calculate the future health risks of women who have had a
pregnancy affected by pre-eclampsia that is likely explained by the
association with heart disease.
They found a small increase in overall mortality among women who had had
pre-eclampsia. Women with a history of pre-eclampsia also had an almost four
fold increased risk of high blood pressure (hypertension) and a two fold
increased risk of fatal and non-fatal ischaemic heart disease, stroke, and
blood clots (venous thromboembolism) in later life.
They found no increase in risk of any cancer, including breast cancer,
suggesting a specific relationship between pre-eclampsia and cardiovascular
disease.
The authors explain that, since the risk of a cardiovascular event increases
with age, and assuming that the effect of the pre-eclampsia is independent
of other risk factors, absolute risk at age 50-59 years would be around 8%
without and 17% with a history of pre-eclampsia and at 60-69 years the risk
would be 14% without and around 30% for a woman with a history of pre-eclampsia.
This suggests that a woman with pre-eclampsia might become eligible for
preventative therapies at an earlier age than would otherwise be the case.
The mechanism underlying this association remains to be defined, but
whatever its nature, a history of pre-eclampsia should be considered when
evaluating risk of cardiovascular disease in middle aged women, they
conclude.
In the second study, researchers in Norway examined whether cardiovascular
risk factors assessed before conception predict pre-eclampsia.
3,494 women were included in the analysis. Several cardiovascular risk
markers, including blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar levels,
weight, and body mass index, were recorded before pregnancy.
133 (3.8%) of these women had a pregnancy complicated by pre-eclampsia.
After adjusting for factors such as smoking and social status, the odds of
pre-eclampsia were seven times greater in women with high pre-pregnant blood
pressure, total cholesterol and blood sugar levels compared to women with
readings in the normal range.
Furthermore, a family history of high blood pressure, ischaemic heart
disease, or diabetes was each associated with a doubling in risk, while
overweight and obese women also had a higher risk compared to women of
normal weight. Women who used oral contraceptives before pregnancy had half
the risk of pre-eclampsia compared to never or previous users.
These results show that unfavourable cardiovascular risk factors that were
present years before pregnancy are strong predictors of pre-eclampsia,
suggesting that pre-eclampsia and cardiovascular diseases may share a common
origin, say the authors.
However, this does not rule out the possibility that the pre-eclamptic
process itself may also contribute to subsequent cardiovascular risk, they
conclude.
An accompanying editorial says that guidelines for prevention of
cardiovascular disease are appropriate for all women, while future research
must investigate whether women with previous pre-eclampsia should have their
cardiovascular risk markers treated earlier and more aggressively (or both).