Association of Preeclampsia With Incident Stroke in Later Life Among Women in the Framingham Heart Study.

Pubmed ID: 33900402

Pubmed Central ID: PMC8076961

Journal: JAMA network open

Publication Date: April 1, 2021

MeSH Terms: Humans, Adult, Female, Case-Control Studies, Risk Factors, Middle Aged, Longitudinal Studies, Follow-Up Studies, Incidence, Stroke, Causality, Pregnancy, Pre-Eclampsia

Grants: K23 NS105924, K07 CA230150

Authors: de Havenon A, Stoddard G, Delic A, Stulberg E, Sheibani N, Hanson H, Theilen L

Cite As: de Havenon A, Delic A, Stulberg E, Sheibani N, Stoddard G, Hanson H, Theilen L. Association of Preeclampsia With Incident Stroke in Later Life Among Women in the Framingham Heart Study. JAMA Netw Open 2021 Apr 1;4(4):e215077.

Studies:

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Contemporary research suggests an association between preeclampsia and later-life stroke among women. To our knowledge, no research to date has accounted for the time-varying nature of shared risk factors for preeclampsia and later-life stroke incidence. OBJECTIVE: To assess the relative risk of incident stroke in later life among women with and without a history of preeclampsia after accounting for time-varying covariates. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This population-based cohort study was a secondary analysis of data from the Framingham Heart Study, which was conducted from 1948 to 2016. Women were included in the analysis if they were stroke free at enrollment and had a minimum of 3 study visits and 1 pregnancy before menopause, hysterectomy, or age 45 years. Data on vascular risk factors, history of preeclampsia, and stroke incidence were collected biannually. Participants were followed up until incident stroke or censorship from the study. Marginal structural models were used to evaluate the relative risk of incident stroke among participants with and without a history of preeclampsia after accounting for time-varying covariates. Data were analyzed from May 2019 to December 2020. EXPOSURES: Presence or absence of preeclampsia among women with 1 or more pregnancies. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Incident stroke in later life. RESULTS: A total of 1435 women (mean [SD] age, 44.4 [7.7] years at the beginning of the study; 100% White) with 41 422 person-years of follow-up were included in the analytic sample. Of those, 169 women had a history of preeclampsia, and 231 women experienced strokes during follow-up. At baseline, women with preeclampsia were more likely to be younger, to be receiving cholesterol-lowering medications, to have lower cholesterol and higher diastolic blood pressure, and to currently smoke. The association between preeclampsia and stroke in the marginal structural model was only evident when adjustment was made for all vascular risk factors over the life course, which indicated that women with a history of preeclampsia had a higher risk of stroke in later life compared with women without a history of preeclampsia (relative risk, 3.79; 95% CI, 1.24-11.60). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The findings of this cohort study suggest that preeclampsia may be a risk factor for later-life stroke among women after adjustment for time-varying vascular and demographic factors. Future research is warranted to fully explore the mediation of this association by midlife vascular risk factors.