Publication | Open Access
Risk of Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes in Women with CKD
338
Citations
26
References
2015
Year
CKD prevalence is increasing among pregnant women. The study evaluated whether CKD elevates the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes by comparing 504 CKD pregnancies to 836 low‑risk controls. Baseline hypertension, proteinuria, systemic disease, and CKD stage were recorded, and outcomes such as cesarean section, preterm delivery, small‑for‑gestational‑age infants, NICU admission, new hypertension, proteinuria changes, CKD stage shift, and composite adverse outcome measures were assessed. Adverse outcomes increased with CKD stage, with stage 1 CKD already conferring a 1.88‑fold risk of general adverse outcomes even without baseline hypertension, proteinuria, or systemic disease, while intrauterine death risk remained unchanged.
CKD is increasingly prevalent in pregnancy. In the Torino-Cagliari Observational Study (TOCOS), we assessed whether the risk for adverse pregnancy outcomes is associated with CKD by comparing pregnancy outcomes of 504 pregnancies in women with CKD to outcomes of 836 low-risk pregnancies in women without CKD. The presence of hypertension, proteinuria (>1 g/d), systemic disease, and CKD stage (at referral) were assessed at baseline. The following outcomes were studied: cesarean section, preterm delivery, and early preterm delivery; small for gestational age (SGA); need for neonatal intensive care unit (NICU); new onset of hypertension; new onset/doubling of proteinuria; CKD stage shift; “general” combined outcome (preterm delivery, NICU, SGA); and “severe” combined outcome (early preterm delivery, NICU, SGA). The risk for adverse outcomes increased across stages (for stage 1 versus stages 4–5: “general” combined outcome, 34.1% versus 90.0%; “severe” combined outcome, 21.4% versus 80.0%; P <0.001). In women with stage 1 CKD, preterm delivery was associated with baseline hypertension (odds ratio [OR], 3.42; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 1.87 to 6.21), systemic disease (OR, 3.13; 95% CI, 1.51 to 6.50), and proteinuria (OR, 3.69; 95% CI, 1.63 to 8.36). However, stage 1 CKD remained associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes (general combined outcome) in women without baseline hypertension, proteinuria, or systemic disease (OR, 1.88; 95% CI, 1.27 to 2.79). The risk of intrauterine death did not differ between patients and controls. Findings from this prospective study suggest a “baseline risk” for adverse pregnancy-related outcomes linked to CKD.
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