Article Text
Abstract
Objective Cardiac changes of hypertensive pregnancy include left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and diastolic dysfunction. These are thought to regress postpartum. We hypothesised that women with a history of hypertensive pregnancy would have altered LV geometry and function when compared with women with only normotensive pregnancies.
Methods In this cohort study, we analysed echocardiograms of 2637 women who participated in the Family Blood Pressure Program. We compared LV mass and function in women with hypertensive pregnancies with those with normotensive pregnancies.
Results Women were evaluated at a mean age of 56 years: 427 (16%) had at least one hypertensive pregnancy; 2210 (84%) had normotensive pregnancies. Compared with women with normotensive pregnancies, women with hypertensive pregnancy had a greater risk of LVH (OR: 1.42; 95% CI 1.01 to 1.99, p=0.05), after adjusting for age, race, research network of the Family Blood Pressure Program, education, parity, BMI, hypertension and diabetes. When duration of hypertension was taken into account, this relationship was no longer significant (OR: 1.19; CI 0.08 to 1.78, p=0.38). Women with hypertensive pregnancies also had greater left atrial size and lower mitral E/A ratio after adjusting for demographic variables. The prevalence of systolic dysfunction was similar between the groups.
Conclusions A history of hypertensive pregnancy is associated with LVH after adjusting for risk factors; this might be explained by longer duration of hypertension. This finding supports current guidelines recommending surveillance of women following a hypertensive pregnancy, and sets the stage for longitudinal echocardiographic studies to further elucidate progression of LV geometry and function after pregnancy.
Clinical trial registrations GENOA- NCT00005269; HyperGEN- NCT00005267; Sapphire- NCT00005270; GenNet- NCT00005268.
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Introduction
LV hypertrophy (LVH), as diagnosed by echocardiography, is associated with an increased risk for cardiovascular mortality,1 independent of other traditional risk factors.2 LVH is the typical cardiac response to chronic ventricular pressure overload, such as with hypertension, or volume overload. Women are more likely to develop LVH in response to hypertension than men.3 This, along with their tendency for higher LVEF,4 may contribute to the increased risk for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (EF) and other conditions associated with diastolic dysfunction noted in women.5 Given these sex differences, predictors of LVH in women are needed.
Pregnancy is considered a ‘stress test’ for cardiovascular disease in women: those who develop a hypertensive pregnancy disorder are at greater risk for chronic hypertension, ischaemic heart disease, stroke and cardiovascular death later in life.6–8 However, little is known about the impact of a history of hypertensive pregnancy on subsequent LVH and LV function in women. The hypertensive pregnancy disorders include gestational hypertension, pre-eclampsia and eclampsia, chronic hypertension and chronic hypertension with superimposed pre-eclampsia. Immediate cardiac effects of a hypertensive pregnancy include eccentric and concentric ventricular remodelling,9 as well as impaired contractility and diastolic dysfunction.10 Increases in left atrial size are accompanied by increases in atrial natriuretic peptide levels.11 Recent studies have questioned the traditional wisdom that these changes regress postpartum. One study demonstrated that LV geometrical changes and diastolic dysfunction persisted 1 year following a pre-eclamptic pregnancy.12 A second demonstrated that women with maternal placental syndrome (MPS), which includes pre-eclampsia and gestational hypertension, compared to those without MPS are more likely to develop heart failure and arrhythmias approximately 8 years postpartum.13 These findings suggest that changes in myocardial structure and function persist postpartum.
Our objective was to examine the relationship between a history of hypertensive pregnancy and LV geometry and function, while controlling for traditional risk factors and duration of hypertension. We hypothesised that women with a history of hypertensive pregnancy would be more likely to LVH and diastolic dysfunction decades after pregnancy, compared with those who had normotensive pregnancies.
Methods
Participants
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), Family Blood Pressure Program (FBPP) consists of four separate multicentre networks: GenNet, GENOA, (Genetic Epidemiology Network of Atherosclerosis), HyperGEN (Hypertension Genetic Epidemiology Network) and SAPPHIRe (Stanford Asian Pacific Program in Hypertension and Insulin Resistance). The FBPP was established in 1995 to investigate the genetic determinants of hypertension.14 Each network collected data on multiple racial and ethnic groups. While recruitment criteria differed among the networks (see online supplementary table S1), all recruited subjects were from families who had multiple members with elevated blood pressure or had a genetic disposition to hypertension. The study design and recruitment have been previously described.14 The four networks used common definitions and standardised measurement protocols to facilitate pooling of results.15 This current study included all women from all networks who reported at least one pregnancy lasting more than 6 months, and who had an echocardiogram. Echocardiograms were performed at the field sites in Maywood, Illinois, USA (GenNet); Jackson, Mississippi and Starr County, Texas, USA (GENOA); Forsyth County, North Carolina, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Salt Lake City, Utah and Birmingham, Alabama, USA (HyperGEN); and Hawaii (SAPPHIRe). Imaging was performed and Doppler evaluation was recorded using standardised protocols and methods as previously described; studies were read centrally at Cornell Medical Center, with >90% of the studies verified or primarily read by a single experienced investigator.16–18 Principal sonographers received training at the centre, and feedback on studies was provided by the Reading Center to monitor compliance with the protocol.
All subjects provided written informed consent prior to participating.
Questionnaires
Questionnaires were administered by a trained interviewer. The Phase 1 (1996–2000) questionnaire examined personal and family medical histories. An additional standardised, previously validated questionnaire concerning hypertension occurring during pregnancy19 was added in Phase 2 (2000–2004); therefore, only Phase 2 data were included in the analysis. In the pregnancy questionnaire, women were asked, ‘Have you had at least one pregnancy lasting more than 6 months?’ Women who responded ‘yes’ were asked to enumerate their pregnancies, and to state whether they developed hypertension in any pregnancy that lasted more than 6 months (thus categorising them into the hypertensive pregnancy group).
Clinical and laboratory variables
Hypertension was diagnosed if the participant reported using a prescription antihypertensive medication, or if average blood pressures were ≥140 mm Hg systolic and/or ≥90 mm Hg diastolic at the study examination. Blood pressure was measured by trained technicians using an automated oscillometric device after 5 min of rest. Values were calculated as the average of the second and third of three readings, taken at least 2 min apart. The duration of hypertension was calculated as the time between the self-reported onset of hypertension and the study visit. For those with an unknown duration of hypertension, we imputed duration as the mean duration (among those for whom the duration of hypertension was known).
Body mass index (BMI) was defined as the weight divided by height (kg/m2). Weight was obtained in the fasting state. Height was measured with the subject standing with heels together, without shoes, against a vertically mounted ruler. ‘Ever’ smoking was defined as a lifetime history of having smoked at least 100 cigarettes. Diabetes was defined by self-report of a physician diagnosis.
Echocardiographic variables
All echocardiograms were interpreted in a blinded manner. LV dimensions were measured at end-diastole and end-systole in accordance with American Society of Echocardiography recommendations on up to three cycles.20 When optimal orientation of the LV could not be obtained for M-mode echocardiography, 2D linear dimensions were obtained using the leading-edge American Society of Echocardiography convention at the time.21 Mitral inflow pulsed wave Doppler recordings were traced along the black-white interface to measure peak E-wave and A-wave velocities and deceleration time of early inflow. The isovolumic relaxation time (IVRT) was measured from the closure spike of the aortic valve to the onset of mitral inflow. LV outflow tract pulsed wave Doppler recording was traced along the black-white interface to measure the time-velocity integral.
End-diastolic LV dimensions were used to calculate LV mass by a necropsy-validated method.22 LV mass was then indexed to body surface area (LV mass index, LVMI). The definition of LVH was a LVMI >95 g/m2. Relative wall thickness (RWT) was calculated as (end-diastolic ventricular septal thickness + end-diastolic posterior wall thickness)÷(end-diastolic LV internal dimension). An increased RWT (>0.42) was used to classify LV geometrical patterns. Normal geometry was present when LVMI and RWT were normal; concentric remodelling referred to the presence of a normal LVMI with an increased RWT; eccentric hypertrophy was defined as a normal RWT plus an increased LVMI, and concentric hypertrophy was defined as an increased RWT plus an increased LVMI.
The EF was calculated from linear LV dimensions using the Teichholz et al method.23 Systolic dysfunction was defined as an EF <50%. The cardiac index was calculated as the product of the time-velocity integral of the transaortic flow at the aortic annular level, annular cross-sectional area and heart rate, indexed to body surface area.
Diastolic parameters reported were mitral inflow (E-wave, mitral early diastolic filling wave; A- wave, mitral late diastolic filling wave; E/A, mitral E velocity/ mitral A velocity) ratio, IVRT and deceleration time, and left atrial dimensions. We present these as continuous variables, with lower E/A ratio, longer IVRT and longer deceleration times suggesting slower relaxation times, and larger atrial dimensions suggesting a higher prevalence of diastolic dysfunction. Echocardiographic data in this study were obtained before the wide availability of tissue Doppler analysis. Given our current understanding of diastolic function grading, in the absence of tissue Doppler measurements, more precise characterisation of diastolic function (normal vs mild to severe diastolic dysfunction, or grades 1–4) was not attempted.
Statistical analyses
Differences in age, race, network and education between the hypertensive pregnancy and normotensive pregnancy groups were assessed using χ2 tests for categorical variables and two-sample t tests for continuous variables. Because of the differences in recruitment methods across networks, linear and logistic regression models adjusting for age, race, network and education were used to assess between-group differences in participant characteristics and echocardiography variables. In order to account for family relationships among the women, all models were fit with generalised estimating equations. Data are presented as adjusted mean (SD) or percentage within group. Additionally, we used logistic regression to assess associations between a history of hypertensive pregnancy and LVH, after adjusting for age, race, network education, parity (categorised as 1, 2, or 3 or more pregnancies), BMI, diabetes, and hypertension and hypertension duration. For the 8% of hypertensive subjects with an unknown duration, the duration of hypertension was imputed as the mean duration of hypertension among subjects with known duration. However, we also included an ‘unknown duration’ indicator variable in the final model. We also performed analyses replacing current hypertension with systolic blood pressure in view of the strong association of current systolic BP with LV mass.24 Analyses were performed using SAS V.9.4 (SAS Institute, Cary, North Carolina, USA). Statistical significance was defined as p<0.05.
Results
Participant characteristics
There were 2637 women from 1449 families who participated in Phase 2, reported at least one pregnancy lasting more than 6 months, and had an echocardiogram. Of these, 427 (16%) reported having had at least one hypertensive pregnancy. The mean age of the entire group was 56±13 years at the time of echocardiography. The mean age at the first hypertensive pregnancy among women who reported a hypertensive pregnancy was 27±7 years, which was 26±14 years prior to the echocardiography.
There were differences in age, race and education by network due to recruitment criteria and network location (p<0.001 for all). As the proportion of subjects from each network differed between the pregnancy groups, age and race also differed among the pregnancy groups (table 1). Women who had a hypertensive pregnancy were younger than women who had normotensive pregnancies. These age differences remained significant after adjusting for network. Women who had a history of a hypertensive pregnancy were more likely to be non-Hispanic Black and less likely to be Japanese compared with women who had normotensive pregnancies. All further variables are presented adjusted for age, race, network and education level.
Women with at least one hypertensive pregnancy had a higher mean BMI and were more likely to have diabetes, hypertension and a family history of hypertension than women with normotensive pregnancy (table 2). Smoking status and renal function did not significantly differ between the groups.
The age of onset of hypertension was 40.9±11.2 years in women with hypertensive pregnancy compared with 50.6±11.9 years in women with normotensive pregnancies (p<0.001). Consequently, the duration of current hypertension was longer in women with hypertensive pregnancy compared with women with normotensive pregnancies (18.0±11.8 years vs 11.6±11.0 years, p<0.001). Among women with hypertensive pregnancy, the age of onset of hypertension was 13.2±12.2 years after the age at which the first hypertensive pregnancy occurred.
LV geometry
Women who had a hypertensive pregnancy had greater ventricular size, LV wall thickness and LV mass than women who had a normotensive pregnancy (table 3). The frequency of LVH was significantly higher in the hypertensive pregnancy group compared with the normotensive pregnancy group (15.8% vs 10.3%). Concentric geometry (RWT >0.42) was rare, occurring in only 67 women in the entire cohort (2.7%). This included 19 (0.8%) women with concentric hypertrophy, of whom three reported a history of hypertensive pregnancies.
After adjusting for age, race, network, education, parity, BMI, diabetes and current hypertension, women who had a hypertensive pregnancy still had greater odds of LVH than women who had normotensive pregnancies (OR 1.42; 95% CI 1.01 to 1.99, p=0.046) (table 4). There was no significant interaction between current hypertension and hypertensive pregnancy on LVH in the final model. Replacing current hypertension with systolic blood pressure showed similar results (OR 1.42; CI 1.00 to 2.01, p=0.051), again with no significant interaction. Inclusion of duration of hypertension in the model was associated with a marked attenuation of the effect of pregnancy hypertension, (OR 1.19; CI 0.80 to 1.78, p=0.38). When subjects with unknown duration of hypertension were excluded, the results were similar: (OR 1.23; CI 0.81 to 1.85, p=0.33).
LV systolic and diastolic function
EF and cardiac output did not differ between the two groups (table 5). Women who had a hypertensive pregnancy had lower E/A ratios (1.07 vs 1.10) and longer deceleration times when compared with the normotensive pregnancy group (207 ms vs 202 ms). Left atrial systolic dimensions were also greater in the hypertensive pregnancy group.
Discussion
In this large multicentre echocardiographic study of patients with hypertension or a predisposition to hypertension, a remote history of hypertensive pregnancy was associated with a higher LV mass index and a higher prevalence of LVH compared with women with a history of normotensive pregnancies. The greater left atrial size and the LV filling patterns observed also suggest a higher prevalence of impaired diastolic function after hypertensive pregnancy compared with normotensive pregnancy. Systolic function did not differ between the two groups.
This study suggests that hypertension in pregnancy may be a risk factor for LVH decades after a hypertensive pregnancy. Echocardiographic studies conducted within 1 year of a pre-eclamptic pregnancy have reported similar results. Two separate longitudinal studies of patients who had echocardiograms during a pre-eclamptic pregnancy showed persistent LV geometrical changes (concentric remodelling, eccentric and concentric hypertrophy)12 and diastolic dysfunction at 1 year postpartum.12 ,25 This persistence of LV geometrical changes seems to herald the development of hypertension. Ghossein-Doha et al26 demonstrated that increased LV mass and left atrial dimension at 10 months postpartum were predictors of the development of hypertension in women whose blood pressure had normalised after a pre-eclamptic pregnancy. This finding is paralleled by other observations of the predictive value of LV mass in initially normotensive adults.27
To our knowledge, this is the first study to clearly demonstrate the association of hypertensive pregnancy with subsequent LVH during long-term follow-up. Other long-term studies have yielded conflicting results. A small longitudinal study evaluated cardiac geometry and function 1 year and 14 years following pre-eclamptic pregnancy (n=20) or normotensive pregnancy (n=8), respectively. At 14 years postpartum, 13% of controls and 35% of women who had pre-eclampsia were hypertensive.28 There were no significant differences in LVMI or E/A ratio at either time point. Strobl et al showed no difference in E/A ratio between normotensive women with a history of pre-eclampsia (n=17) or HELLP (haemolysis, elevated liver enzymes and low platelets) syndrome (n=14), compared with controls with normotensive pregnancies (n=17). Cases and controls were matched for mean blood pressure and BMI, 15 years following the index pregnancy.29 However, the authors did observe a more abnormal myocardial performance index in the pre-eclampsia and HELLP groups compared with controls. The myocardial performance index incorporates features of systolic and diastolic function, indicating that women who had pre-eclampsia had impaired cardiovascular function compared with women who had normotensive pregnancies.
Several factors could contribute to the stronger effects observed in the present study, compared with previous studies. These include the significantly older age of the participants, greater prevalence of hypertension, and longer exposure to hypertension, high prevalence of diabetes mellitus and obesity and the larger sample size in our study. The multicentre, multiethnic sample of our study is an important strength, as it improves the generalisability of the study.
Taken altogether, these studies suggest that there are several potential pathways to development of LVH and subsequent diastolic dysfunction after a hypertensive pregnancy (figure 1). In the first pathway, blood pressure and myocardial function normalise after pregnancy, as in gestational hypertension or pre-eclampsia. However, women with a history of hypertensive pregnancy may develop hypertension years earlier than women with normotensive pregnancies, as was suggested by the earlier age of onset in our study. Alternatively, hypertension may persist following pregnancy, as in women who have chronic hypertension or chronic hypertension with superimposed pre-eclampsia. Both sets of scenarios expose women with hypertensive pregnancy to many more years of hypertension, increasing their risk of LVH compared with women with normotensive pregnancies.
In the second potential pathway, suggested by short-term echocardiographic studies,12 ,26 cardiac changes persist following hypertensive pregnancy, despite normalisation of blood pressure. This suggests that hypertensive pregnancy itself might be an independent risk factor for LVH and cardiac dysfunction. A longitudinal study specifically designed to follow changes in LV mass would be needed to confirm or disprove this second hypothesis.
The difference in the prevalence of LVH between the hypertensive and normotensive pregnancy groups (16% vs 10%) has significant clinical implications. LVH is an independent prognostic factor for cardiovascular mortality, and our findings emphasise the importance of hypertensive pregnancy as a cardiovascular risk factor and the need for postpartum interventions to reduce cardiovascular risk.
In our analysis, we have opted not to present data for the 13% of women in the cohort who were nulliparous. Our study assesses the response of blood pressure to the stress of pregnancy (a normotensive vs hypertensive response) and its impact on long-term cardiovascular health. Responses to the stress test of pregnancy are unknown in nulliparous women; hence, this group may be an admixture of the other two groups. The choice for nulliparity may be a sociological as well as a physiological phenomenon, and without knowledge of the specific reasons for nulliparity, it may be difficult to draw further conclusions about nulliparous women.
Limitations
This study has some limitations. Fifty-five per cent of the participants had hypertension, as the FBPP targeted families with strong histories of hypertension. This study may not be generalisable to populations with lower hypertension rates. However, reports from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey estimate that the prevalence of hypertension in the USA is 34% among women aged 45–54 years and 52% among women aged 55–64 years.30 This suggests that the prevalence of hypertension in our sample is not that much higher than that of the US population. The inclusion of fewer hypertensive subjects may have resulted in a stronger relationship between altered LV geometry and function and hypertensive pregnancy, as a history of hypertension is a risk factor for hypertension in pregnancy and LVH. The prevalence of obesity and diabetes mellitus are also significantly higher than the normal population, likely representing a clustering of other metabolic syndrome components in women with hypertension.
Exact characterisation of diastolic function was not possible, as data were collected before widespread use of tissue Doppler measurements. Pregnancy history was determined by questionnaire, which introduces the potential for recall bias. However, the questionnaire had 80% sensitivity and 96% specificity for a history of pre-eclampsia among women who had pre-eclampsia at least 20 years ago.19 Trained interviewers were used to limit interviewer bias. We also cannot account for survival bias. Our study does not differentiate among the subsets of hypertensive pregnancy disorders. However, recent evidence suggests that all of the hypertensive pregnancy disorders are associated with increased risk of subsequent cardiovascular morbidity,6 and it is therefore important to study their long-term impact. Finally, this study sampled subjects at a single time point, many years after pregnancy. We therefore have no intermediate data on blood pressure levels, but our questionnaire did capture duration of clinically diagnosed hypertension.
Despite these limitations, our data clearly indicate that a history of hypertensive pregnancy is associated with LVH even after adjusting for classical risk factors. In addition, the association seems to be mediated through the duration of hypertension following hypertensive pregnancies. Commonly, young women after hypertensive pregnancy are lost to follow-up after their hypertension resolves. The identification of hypertension in pregnancy as a female-specific risk factor for adverse cardiac remodelling adds to the growing body of evidence linking hypertensive pregnancy and future cardiovascular disease. Our data support the American Heart Association recommendation that women with a history of hypertensive pregnancy undergo heightened surveillance31 and more aggressive therapy, which may decrease the burden of cardiovascular disease in women later in life.
Key messages
What is already known on this subject?
Small echocardiographic studies show that women with hypertensive pregnancy exhibit concentric and eccentric remodelling, impairment of contractility and diastolic dysfunction. Short-term follow-up studies vary on whether these changes persist or regress postpartum.
What might this study add?
In this large, multicentre, multiethnic study, we have demonstrated that a history of hypertensive pregnancy is a risk factor for LV hypertrophy and alterations in diastolic function later in life.
How might this impact on clinical practice?
This study adds insight into possible mechanisms underlying the increased long-term morbidity associated with a hypertensive pregnancy disorder diagnosis. It underscores the need for vigilance in monitoring of women with a history of hypertensive pregnancy.
References
Supplementary materials
Supplementary Data
This web only file has been produced by the BMJ Publishing Group from an electronic file supplied by the author(s) and has not been edited for content.
- Data supplement 1 - Online table
Footnotes
Funding This study received funding from the following sources: Award number P50 AG 44170 from the National Institute on Aging, (VDG); The Office of Women's Health Research: Building Interdisciplinary Careers in Women's Health award K12HD065987 (TLW); and Grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health: U01HL054481, U01HL054471, U01HL054512 and U01HL054498.
Competing interests None declared.
Ethics approval The institutional review board of each participating site.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.