Aspirin versus Placebo in Pregnancies at High Risk for Preterm Preeclampsia

The New England Journal of Medicine, 377(7), 613-622

DOI 10.1056/NEJMoa1704559 PMID 28657417

Abstract

Background

Preterm preeclampsia is an important cause of maternal and perinatal death and complications. It is uncertain whether the intake of low-dose aspirin during pregnancy reduces the risk of preterm preeclampsia.

Methods

In this multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, we randomly assigned 1776 women with singleton pregnancies who were at high risk for preterm preeclampsia to receive aspirin, at a dose of 150 mg per day, or placebo from 11 to 14 weeks of gestation until 36 weeks of gestation. The primary outcome was delivery with preeclampsia before 37 weeks of gestation. The analysis was performed according to the intention-to-treat principle.

Results

A total of 152 women withdrew consent during the trial, and 4 were lost to follow up, which left 798 participants in the aspirin group and 822 in the placebo group. Preterm preeclampsia occurred in 13 participants (1.6%) in the aspirin group, as compared with 35 (4.3%) in the placebo group (odds ratio in the aspirin group, 0.38; 95% confidence interval, 0.20 to 0.74; P=0.004). Results were materially unchanged in a sensitivity analysis that took into account participants who had withdrawn or were lost to follow-up. Adherence was good, with a reported intake of 85% or more of the required number of tablets in 79.9% of the participants. There were no significant between-group differences in the incidence of neonatal adverse outcomes or other adverse events.

Conclusions

Treatment with low-dose aspirin in women at high risk for preterm preeclampsia resulted in a lower incidence of this diagnosis than placebo. (Funded by the European Union Seventh Framework Program and the Fetal Medicine Foundation; EudraCT number, 2013-003778-29 ; Current Controlled Trials number, ISRCTN13633058 .).

Topics

low-dose aspirin prevention preterm preeclampsia randomized controlled trial, aspirin 150mg preeclampsia prophylaxis first trimester, ASPRE trial aspirin preterm preeclampsia Nicolaides, high risk preeclampsia screening aspirin intervention, preeclampsia prevention double-blind placebo-controlled trial, aspirin pregnancy 11-14 weeks gestation preeclampsia, first trimester screening preeclampsia risk reduction aspirin, Rolnik Poon preterm preeclampsia aspirin multicenter trial, preeclampsia maternal perinatal outcomes aspirin prophylaxis, singleton pregnancy high risk preeclampsia aspirin effectiveness
PMID 28657417 28657417 DOI 10.1056/NEJMoa1704559 10.1056/NEJMoa1704559

Cite this article

Rolnik, D. L., Wright, D., Poon, L. C., O'Gorman, N., Syngelaki, A., de Paco Matallana, C., Akolekar, R., Cicero, S., Janga, D., Singh, M., Molina, F. S., Persico, N., Jani, J. C., Plasencia, W., Papaioannou, G., Tenenbaum-Gavish, K., Meiri, H., Gizurarson, S., Maclagan, K., & Nicolaides, K. H. (2017). Aspirin versus Placebo in Pregnancies at High Risk for Preterm Preeclampsia. *The New England journal of medicine*, *377*(7), 613-622. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1704559

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