6.0.0.0 PREG­NAN­CY AND DRUG CON­SID­ER­A­TIONS

Rec­om­men­da­tions

14.13 In preg­nant pa­tients with di­a­betes and chron­ic hy­per­ten­sion, blood pres­sure tar­gets of 120–160/80–105 mmHg are sug­gested in the in­ter­est of op­ti­miz­ing long-‍term ma­ter­nal health and min­i­miz­ing im­paired fetal growth. E

14.14 Po­ten­tial­ly ter­ato­genic med­i­ca­tions (i.e., ACE in­hibitors, an­giotensin re­cep­tor block­ers, statins) should be avoid­ed in sex­u­al­ly ac­tive women of child-‍bear­ing age who are not using re­li­able con­tra­cep­tion. B

In nor­mal preg­nan­cy, blood pres­sure is lower than in the nonpreg­nant state. In a preg­nan­cy com­pli­cat­ed by di­a­betes and chron­ic hy­per­ten­sion, tar­get goals for sys­tolic blood pres­sure 120–160 mmHg and di­as­tolic blood pres­sure 80–105 mmHg are rea­son­able (75). Lower blood pres­sure lev­els may be as­so­ci­at­ed with im­paired fetal growth. In a 2015 study tar­geting di­as­tolic blood pres­sure of 100 mmHg ver­sus 85 mmHg in preg­nant women, only 6% of whom had GDM at en­roll­ment, there was no dif­fer­ence in preg­nan­cy loss, neona­tal care, or other neona­tal out­comes, al­though women in the less in­ten­sive treat­ment group had a high­er rate of un­con­trolled hy­per­ten­sion (76).

Dur­ing preg­nan­cy, treat­ment with ACE in­hibitors and an­giotensin re­cep­tor block­ers is contrain­di­cat­ed be­cause they may cause fetal renal dys­pla­sia, oligo­hy­dram­nios, and in­trauter­ine growth re­stric­tion (10). An­ti­hy­per­ten­sive drugs known to be ef­fec­tive and safe in preg­nan­cy in­clude methyl­dopa, nifedip­ine, la­betalol, dil­ti­azem, cloni­dine, and pra­zosin. Atenolol is not rec­om­mend­ed. Chron­ic di­uret­ic use dur­ing preg­nan­cy is not rec­om­mend­ed as it has been as­so­ci­at­ed with re­strict­ed ma­ter­nal plas­ma vol­ume, which may re­duce uteropla­cen­tal per­fu­sion (77). On the basis of avail­able ev­i­dence, statins should also be avoid­ed in preg­nan­cy (78).

Please see PREG­NAN­CY AND AN­TI­HY­PER­TEN­SIVE MED­I­CA­TIONS in Sec­tion 10 “Car­dio­vas­cu­lar Dis­ease and Risk Man­age­ment” for more in­for­ma­tion on man­ag­ing blood pres­sure in preg­nan­cy.