Abstract

ObjectiveSleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is characterised by intermittent hypoxemia, sympathetic activation and widespread endothelial dysfunction, sharing pathophysiologic features with the hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. We sought to determine whether coexisting SDB would adversely impact the outcomes of women with gestational hypertension (GH) and preeclampsia (PE), and healthy matched controls.Study designWomen diagnosed with GH or PE along with BMI- and gestation-matched normotensive controls underwent polysomnography in late pregnancy to establish the presence or absence of SDB (RDI ≥ 5). Clinical outcomes of hypertensive disease severity were compared between groups, and venous blood samples were taken in the third trimester and at delivery to examine for any impact of SDB on the anti-angiogenic markers of PE.ResultsData was available for 17 women with PE, 24 women with GH and 44 controls. SDB was diagnosed in 41% of the PE group, 63% of the GH group and 39% of the control group. Women with PE and co-existing SDB did not have worse outcomes in terms of gestation at diagnosis of PE (SDB = 29.1 (25.9, 32.1) weeks vs. no SDB = 32.0 (29.0, 33.9), p = n.s.) and days between diagnosis of PE and delivery (SDB = 20.0 (4.0, 35.0) days vs. no SDB = 10.5 (9.0, 14.0), p = n.s.). There were also no differences in severity of hypertension, antihypertensive treatment and biochemical, haematological and anti-angiogenic markers of PE between SDB and no SDB groups. Similar results were observed among women with GH. Healthy control women with SDB were no more likely to develop a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy in the later stages of pregnancy (SDB = 5.9% vs. no SDB = 7.4%, p = n.s.). Increasing the threshold for diagnosis of SDB to RDI ≥ 15 did not unmask a worse prognosis.ConclusionThe presence of SDB during pregnancy did not worsen the disease course of GH or PE, and was not associated with high blood pressure or anti-angiogenic markers of hypertensive disease amongst healthy pregnant women. Given the numerous reports of the relationship between SDB and diagnosis of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, it appears more work is required to distinguish causal, versus confounding, pathways.

Highlights

  • Preeclampsia (PE) is a serious multi-system disorder that represents a significant threat to the life of the baby and the mother. [1] Limited treatment options have driven a search for potentially modifiable contributors to disease progression

  • sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) was diagnosed in 41% of the PE group, 63% of the Gestational hypertension (GH) group and 39% of the control group

  • Healthy control women with SDB were no more likely to develop a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy in the later stages of pregnancy (SDB = 5.9% vs. no SDB = 7.4%, p = n.s.)

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Summary

Introduction

Preeclampsia (PE) is a serious multi-system disorder that represents a significant threat to the life of the baby and the mother. [1] Limited treatment options have driven a search for potentially modifiable contributors to disease progression. Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) has been shown to be more common in women with hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP) [2] but only a few experimental studies have attempted to identify the pathophysiology underpinning this relationship. SDB confers a 3-fold increase in risk of hypertension independent of other risk factors, [5,6] likely due to the pathophysiological sequelae of sympathetic activation, widespread inflammation and endothelial dysfunction. Reports regarding the increased frequency of SDB among women with HDP have variably accounted for obesity. [11,12,13] SDB generates inflammation, oxidative stress, and the release of other factors that could contribute to placental dysfunction. As SDB is treatable, this would provide a new therapeutic avenue for HDP

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