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Determining optimal timing of birth for women with chronic or gestational hypertension at term: The WILL (When to Induce Labour to Limit risk in pregnancy hypertension) randomised trial

Determining optimal timing of birth for women with chronic or gestational hypertension at term: The WILL (When to Induce Labour to Limit risk in pregnancy hypertension) randomised trial
Determining optimal timing of birth for women with chronic or gestational hypertension at term: The WILL (When to Induce Labour to Limit risk in pregnancy hypertension) randomised trial

Background Chronic or gestational hypertension complicates approximately 7% of pregnancies, half of which reach 37 weeks’ gestation. Early term birth (at 37 to 38 weeks) may reduce maternal complications, cesareans, stillbirths, and costs but may increase neonatal morbidity. In the WILL Trial (When to Induce Labour to Limit risk in pregnancy hypertension), we aimed to establish optimal timing of birth for women with chronic or gestational hypertension who reach term and remain well. Methods and findings This 50-centre, open-label, randomised trial in the United Kingdom included an economic analysis. WILL randomised women with chronic or gestational hypertension at 36 to 37 weeks and a singleton fetus, and who provided documented informed consent to “Planned early term birth at 38 +0–3 weeks” (intervention) or “usual care at term” (control). The coprimary outcomes were “poor maternal outcome” (composite of severe hypertension, maternal death, or maternal morbidity; superiority hypothesis) and “neonatal care unit admission for ≥4 hours” (noninferiority hypothesis). The key secondary was cesarean. Follow-up was to 6 weeks postpartum. The planned sample size was 540/group. Analysis was by intention-to-treat. A total of 403 participants (37.3% of target) were randomised to the intervention (n = 201) or control group (n = 202), from 3 June 2019 to 19 December 2022, when the funder stopped the trial for delayed recruitment. In the intervention (versus control) group, losses to follow-up were 18/201 (9%) versus 15/202 (7%). In each group, maternal age was about 30 years, about one-fifth of women were from ethnic minorities, over half had obesity, approximately half had chronic hypertension, and most were on antihypertensives with normal blood pressure. In the intervention (versus control) group, birth was a median of 0.9 weeks earlier (38.4 [38.3 to 38.6] versus 39.3 [38.7 to 39.9] weeks). There was no evidence of a difference in “poor maternal outcome” (27/201 [13%] versus 24/202 [12%], respectively; adjusted risk ratio [aRR] 1.16, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.72 to 1.87). For “neonatal care unit admission for ≥4 hours,” the intervention was considered noninferior to the control as the adjusted risk difference (aRD) 95% CI upper bound did not cross the 8% prespecified noninferiority margin (14/201 [7%] versus 14/202 [7%], respectively; aRD 0.003, 95% CI −0.05 to +0.06), although event rates were lower-than-estimated. The intervention (versus control) was associated with no difference in cesarean (58/201 [29%] versus 72/202 [36%], respectively; aRR 0.81, 95% CI 0.61 to 1.08. There were no serious adverse events. Limitations include our smaller-than-planned sample size, and lower-than-anticipated event rates, so the findings may not be generalisable to where hypertension is not treated with antihypertensive therapy. Conclusions In this study, we observed that most women with chronic or gestational hypertension required labour induction, and planned birth at 38 +0–3 weeks (versus usual care) resulted in birth an average of 6 days earlier, and no differences in poor maternal outcome or neonatal morbidity. Our findings provide reassurance about planned birth at 38 +0–3 weeks as a clinical option for these women.

Adult, Cesarean Section, Chronic Disease, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced/prevention & control, Labor, Induced, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome/epidemiology, Term Birth, Time Factors, United Kingdom/epidemiology
1549-1277
Magee, Laura A
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Kirkham, Katie
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Tohill, Sue
a8ecd092-0392-4c0f-a460-0f28e2439f89
Gkini, Eleni
0c6897c3-1aa2-4335-aa38-ef462dc9aedb
Moakes, Catherine A
eedafd90-5006-47ed-9c9a-0e33f2949e1e
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Green, Marcus
a1b23737-c71d-4711-9851-4aa6aa388a2d
Hutcheon, Jennifer A
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Javed, Mishal
cdc7e931-0a39-490e-9f41-ee4849b9b87e
Kigozi, Jesse
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Mol, Ben W M
0353cb2d-24a2-4657-aa55-9975363573a0
Singer, Joel
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Hardy, Pollyanna
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Stubbs, Clive
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Thornton, James G
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von Dadelszen, Peter
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WILL Trial Study Group
Magee, Laura A
12dc7d1f-b93a-421f-8f47-46e436e5cc30
Kirkham, Katie
08d797cc-7844-49a6-9d7d-a92ebc7179cc
Tohill, Sue
a8ecd092-0392-4c0f-a460-0f28e2439f89
Gkini, Eleni
0c6897c3-1aa2-4335-aa38-ef462dc9aedb
Moakes, Catherine A
eedafd90-5006-47ed-9c9a-0e33f2949e1e
Dorling, Jon
e55dcb9a-a798-41a1-8753-9e9ff8aab630
Green, Marcus
a1b23737-c71d-4711-9851-4aa6aa388a2d
Hutcheon, Jennifer A
3a181486-aa3e-4bb6-9071-483728457614
Javed, Mishal
cdc7e931-0a39-490e-9f41-ee4849b9b87e
Kigozi, Jesse
5269fb93-f766-4d04-9635-32325c7dff19
Mol, Ben W M
0353cb2d-24a2-4657-aa55-9975363573a0
Singer, Joel
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Hardy, Pollyanna
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Stubbs, Clive
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Thornton, James G
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von Dadelszen, Peter
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Dorling, Jon , WILL Trial Study Group (2024) Determining optimal timing of birth for women with chronic or gestational hypertension at term: The WILL (When to Induce Labour to Limit risk in pregnancy hypertension) randomised trial. PLoS Medicine, 21 (11), [e1004481]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1004481).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background Chronic or gestational hypertension complicates approximately 7% of pregnancies, half of which reach 37 weeks’ gestation. Early term birth (at 37 to 38 weeks) may reduce maternal complications, cesareans, stillbirths, and costs but may increase neonatal morbidity. In the WILL Trial (When to Induce Labour to Limit risk in pregnancy hypertension), we aimed to establish optimal timing of birth for women with chronic or gestational hypertension who reach term and remain well. Methods and findings This 50-centre, open-label, randomised trial in the United Kingdom included an economic analysis. WILL randomised women with chronic or gestational hypertension at 36 to 37 weeks and a singleton fetus, and who provided documented informed consent to “Planned early term birth at 38 +0–3 weeks” (intervention) or “usual care at term” (control). The coprimary outcomes were “poor maternal outcome” (composite of severe hypertension, maternal death, or maternal morbidity; superiority hypothesis) and “neonatal care unit admission for ≥4 hours” (noninferiority hypothesis). The key secondary was cesarean. Follow-up was to 6 weeks postpartum. The planned sample size was 540/group. Analysis was by intention-to-treat. A total of 403 participants (37.3% of target) were randomised to the intervention (n = 201) or control group (n = 202), from 3 June 2019 to 19 December 2022, when the funder stopped the trial for delayed recruitment. In the intervention (versus control) group, losses to follow-up were 18/201 (9%) versus 15/202 (7%). In each group, maternal age was about 30 years, about one-fifth of women were from ethnic minorities, over half had obesity, approximately half had chronic hypertension, and most were on antihypertensives with normal blood pressure. In the intervention (versus control) group, birth was a median of 0.9 weeks earlier (38.4 [38.3 to 38.6] versus 39.3 [38.7 to 39.9] weeks). There was no evidence of a difference in “poor maternal outcome” (27/201 [13%] versus 24/202 [12%], respectively; adjusted risk ratio [aRR] 1.16, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.72 to 1.87). For “neonatal care unit admission for ≥4 hours,” the intervention was considered noninferior to the control as the adjusted risk difference (aRD) 95% CI upper bound did not cross the 8% prespecified noninferiority margin (14/201 [7%] versus 14/202 [7%], respectively; aRD 0.003, 95% CI −0.05 to +0.06), although event rates were lower-than-estimated. The intervention (versus control) was associated with no difference in cesarean (58/201 [29%] versus 72/202 [36%], respectively; aRR 0.81, 95% CI 0.61 to 1.08. There were no serious adverse events. Limitations include our smaller-than-planned sample size, and lower-than-anticipated event rates, so the findings may not be generalisable to where hypertension is not treated with antihypertensive therapy. Conclusions In this study, we observed that most women with chronic or gestational hypertension required labour induction, and planned birth at 38 +0–3 weeks (versus usual care) resulted in birth an average of 6 days earlier, and no differences in poor maternal outcome or neonatal morbidity. Our findings provide reassurance about planned birth at 38 +0–3 weeks as a clinical option for these women.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 September 2024
Published date: 26 November 2024
Additional Information: Copyright: © 2024 Magee et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Keywords: Adult, Cesarean Section, Chronic Disease, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Hypertension, Pregnancy-Induced/prevention & control, Labor, Induced, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Outcome/epidemiology, Term Birth, Time Factors, United Kingdom/epidemiology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496544
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496544
ISSN: 1549-1277
PURE UUID: 901c5729-915d-457f-bf7c-89f2d6ac76d0
ORCID for Jon Dorling: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1691-3221

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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2024 17:57
Last modified: 18 Dec 2024 03:18

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Contributors

Author: Laura A Magee
Author: Katie Kirkham
Author: Sue Tohill
Author: Eleni Gkini
Author: Catherine A Moakes
Author: Jon Dorling ORCID iD
Author: Marcus Green
Author: Jennifer A Hutcheon
Author: Mishal Javed
Author: Jesse Kigozi
Author: Ben W M Mol
Author: Joel Singer
Author: Pollyanna Hardy
Author: Clive Stubbs
Author: James G Thornton
Author: Peter von Dadelszen
Corporate Author: WILL Trial Study Group

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