PLoS Medicine (Apr 2021)

International gestational age-specific centiles for blood pressure in pregnancy from the INTERGROWTH-21st Project in 8 countries: A longitudinal cohort study.

  • Lauren J Green,
  • Stephen H Kennedy,
  • Lucy Mackillop,
  • Stephen Gerry,
  • Manorama Purwar,
  • Eleonora Staines Urias,
  • Leila Cheikh Ismail,
  • Fernando Barros,
  • Cesar Victora,
  • Maria Carvalho,
  • Eric Ohuma,
  • Yasmin Jaffer,
  • J Alison Noble,
  • Michael Gravett,
  • Ruyan Pang,
  • Ann Lambert,
  • Enrico Bertino,
  • Aris T Papageorghiou,
  • Cutberto Garza,
  • Zulfiqar Bhutta,
  • José Villar,
  • Peter Watkinson,
  • International Fetal and Newborn Growth Consortium for the 21st Century (INTERGROWTH-21st)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1003611
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 4
p. e1003611

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundGestational hypertensive and acute hypotensive disorders are associated with maternal morbidity and mortality worldwide. However, physiological blood pressure changes in pregnancy are insufficiently defined. We describe blood pressure changes across healthy pregnancies from the International Fetal and Newborn Growth Consortium for the 21st Century (INTERGROWTH-21st) Fetal Growth Longitudinal Study (FGLS) to produce international, gestational age-specific, smoothed centiles (third, 10th, 50th, 90th, and 97th) for blood pressure.Methods and findingsSecondary analysis of a prospective, longitudinal, observational cohort study (2009 to 2016) was conducted across 8 diverse urban areas in Brazil, China, India, Italy, Kenya, Oman, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. We enrolled healthy women at low risk of pregnancy complications. We measured blood pressure using standardised methodology and validated equipment at enrolment at 14 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure by >11 mmHg in fewer than 10% of women at any gestational age. Fewer than 10% of women increased their systolic blood pressure by >24 mmHg or diastolic blood pressure by >18 mmHg at any gestational age. The study's main limitations were the unavailability of prepregnancy blood pressure values and inability to explore circadian effects because time of day was not recorded for the blood pressure measurements.ConclusionsOur findings provide international, gestational age-specific centiles and limits of acceptable change to facilitate earlier recognition of deteriorating health in pregnant women. These centiles challenge the idea of a clinically significant midpregnancy drop in blood pressure.