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Determinants of magnesium sulphate use in women hospitalized at <29 weeks with severe or non-severe pre-eclampsia

OBJECTIVE: Magnesium sulphate is recommended by international guidelines to prevent eclampsia among women with pre-eclampsia, especially when it is severe, but fewer than 70% of such women receive magnesium sulphate. We aimed to identify variables that prompt Canadian physicians to administer magnes...

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Autores principales: De Silva, Dane A., Proctor, Lily, von Dadelszen, Peter, McCoach, Meghan, Lee, Tang, Magee, Laura A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5741231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29272274
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189966
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author De Silva, Dane A.
Proctor, Lily
von Dadelszen, Peter
McCoach, Meghan
Lee, Tang
Magee, Laura A.
author_facet De Silva, Dane A.
Proctor, Lily
von Dadelszen, Peter
McCoach, Meghan
Lee, Tang
Magee, Laura A.
author_sort De Silva, Dane A.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Magnesium sulphate is recommended by international guidelines to prevent eclampsia among women with pre-eclampsia, especially when it is severe, but fewer than 70% of such women receive magnesium sulphate. We aimed to identify variables that prompt Canadian physicians to administer magnesium sulphate to women with pre-eclampsia. METHODS: Data were used from the Canadian Perinatal Network (2005–11) of women hospitalized at <29 weeks’ who were thought to be at high risk of delivery due to pre-eclampsia (using broad Canadian definition). Unadjusted analyses of relative risks were estimated directly and population attributable risk percent (PAR%) calculated to identify variables associated with magnesium sulphate use. A multivariable model was created and a generalized estimating equation was used to estimate the adjusted RR that explained magnesium sulphate use in pre-eclampsia. The adjusted PAR% was estimated by bootstrapping. RESULTS: Of 631 women with pre-eclampsia, 174 (30.1%) had severe pre-eclampsia, of whom 131 (75.3%) received magnesium sulphate. 457 (69.9%) women had non-severe pre-eclamspia, of whom 291 (63.7%) received magnesium sulphate. Use of magnesium sulphate among women with pre-eclampsia could be attributed to the following clinical factors (PAR%): delivery for ‘adverse conditions’ (48.7%), severe hypertension (21.9%), receipt of antenatal corticosteroids (20.0%), maternal transport prior to delivery (9.9%), heavy proteinuria (7.8%), and interventionist care (3.4%). CONCLUSIONS: Clinicians are more likely to administer magnesium sulphate for eclampsia prophylaxis in the presence of more severe maternal clinical features, in addition to concomitant antenatal corticosteroid administration, and shorter admission to delivery periods related to transport from another institution or plans for interventionist care.
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spelling pubmed-57412312018-01-10 Determinants of magnesium sulphate use in women hospitalized at <29 weeks with severe or non-severe pre-eclampsia De Silva, Dane A. Proctor, Lily von Dadelszen, Peter McCoach, Meghan Lee, Tang Magee, Laura A. PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: Magnesium sulphate is recommended by international guidelines to prevent eclampsia among women with pre-eclampsia, especially when it is severe, but fewer than 70% of such women receive magnesium sulphate. We aimed to identify variables that prompt Canadian physicians to administer magnesium sulphate to women with pre-eclampsia. METHODS: Data were used from the Canadian Perinatal Network (2005–11) of women hospitalized at <29 weeks’ who were thought to be at high risk of delivery due to pre-eclampsia (using broad Canadian definition). Unadjusted analyses of relative risks were estimated directly and population attributable risk percent (PAR%) calculated to identify variables associated with magnesium sulphate use. A multivariable model was created and a generalized estimating equation was used to estimate the adjusted RR that explained magnesium sulphate use in pre-eclampsia. The adjusted PAR% was estimated by bootstrapping. RESULTS: Of 631 women with pre-eclampsia, 174 (30.1%) had severe pre-eclampsia, of whom 131 (75.3%) received magnesium sulphate. 457 (69.9%) women had non-severe pre-eclamspia, of whom 291 (63.7%) received magnesium sulphate. Use of magnesium sulphate among women with pre-eclampsia could be attributed to the following clinical factors (PAR%): delivery for ‘adverse conditions’ (48.7%), severe hypertension (21.9%), receipt of antenatal corticosteroids (20.0%), maternal transport prior to delivery (9.9%), heavy proteinuria (7.8%), and interventionist care (3.4%). CONCLUSIONS: Clinicians are more likely to administer magnesium sulphate for eclampsia prophylaxis in the presence of more severe maternal clinical features, in addition to concomitant antenatal corticosteroid administration, and shorter admission to delivery periods related to transport from another institution or plans for interventionist care. Public Library of Science 2017-12-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5741231/ /pubmed/29272274 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189966 Text en © 2017 De Silva et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
De Silva, Dane A.
Proctor, Lily
von Dadelszen, Peter
McCoach, Meghan
Lee, Tang
Magee, Laura A.
Determinants of magnesium sulphate use in women hospitalized at <29 weeks with severe or non-severe pre-eclampsia
title Determinants of magnesium sulphate use in women hospitalized at <29 weeks with severe or non-severe pre-eclampsia
title_full Determinants of magnesium sulphate use in women hospitalized at <29 weeks with severe or non-severe pre-eclampsia
title_fullStr Determinants of magnesium sulphate use in women hospitalized at <29 weeks with severe or non-severe pre-eclampsia
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of magnesium sulphate use in women hospitalized at <29 weeks with severe or non-severe pre-eclampsia
title_short Determinants of magnesium sulphate use in women hospitalized at <29 weeks with severe or non-severe pre-eclampsia
title_sort determinants of magnesium sulphate use in women hospitalized at <29 weeks with severe or non-severe pre-eclampsia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5741231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29272274
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189966
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