Risk of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy following assisted reproductive technology: overview and meta-analysis

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Abstract

The extent of the increased risk of pregnancy hypertensive disorders following assisted reproductive technology (ART) was investigated. PubMed and the Cochrane Collaboration Library were used as data sources to identify and select longitudinal cohorts comparing pregnancies following ART with spontaneously conceived pregnancies, between 1978 and June 2016. Risk ratios and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) of three outcomes, ie, gestational hypertension (GH), preeclampsia (PE), and their sum (PHD), were calculated. Stratification of results by gestation order (singletons and nonsingletons) was pursued, but a separate “all orders” mixed stratification was considered. Sixty-six longitudinal studies (7 038 029 pregnancies; 203 375 following any ART) were eligible. All outcomes independent of gestation order (“all orders”) were increased following any invasive ART: GH (+79% [95% CI, 24%–157%]) and PE (+75% [95% CI, 50%–103%]) to a greater extent, with smaller increases in PHD (+54% [95% CI, 39%–70%]). The risk of PHD following ART steadily increased independent of gestation order.

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Thomopoulos, C., Salamalekis, G., Kintis, K., Andrianopoulou, I., Michalopoulou, H., Skalis, G., … Salamalekis, E. (2017). Risk of hypertensive disorders in pregnancy following assisted reproductive technology: overview and meta-analysis. Journal of Clinical Hypertension, 19(2), 173–183. https://doi.org/10.1111/jch.12945

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