Researchers have stumbled across a major breakthrough in their quest to treat the potentially fatal pregnancy complication pre-eclampsia.
Pre-eclampsia occurs when the placenta releases a toxin into the mother’s bloodstream, damaging her organs and forcing the early delivery of her baby.
It affects about one in 20 pregnancies, killing an estimated 70,000 women around the world each year, and there is no medical treatment.
But a team from Melbourne’s Mercy Hospital has found Nexium, a drug used to treat reflux, could stop the production of the toxins.
Dr Natalie Hannan from Melbourne’s Mercy Hospital said the discovery was “exciting” as it meant babies would be able to remain in the womb for longer.
She said the diagnosis for pre-eclampsia came in the middle of most pregnancies, forcing clinicians to deliver the baby early in order to save the mother.
“So we hope that this medication will actually enable the mother to have a longer pregnancy safely, in order to get the baby better grown for a time to come out that is more safe,” she said.
Dr Hannan said the discovery could potentially save the lives of both mother and baby.
“Both for the mother, because it will keep the disease at bay — we hope,” she said.