Management Rheumatic Disease Around Pregnancy Carlos Zevallos Jr, DO Crystal Arthritis Center
Transcription
Management Rheumatic Disease Around Pregnancy Carlos Zevallos Jr, DO Crystal Arthritis Center
Management Rheumatic Disease Around Pregnancy Carlos Zevallos Jr, DO Crystal Arthritis Center Akron, Ohio Pregnancy in Rheumatic Disease • Pregnancy causes shift from Th1 to Th2 lymphocyte dominance. • Th1 disease like RA - remission • Th2 diseases like SLE - flare • High Risk: woman’s previous obstetric history, organ damage, disease activity, serologic profile, additional medical history Fertility • Fertility not generally affected except CKD 3-5, eGFR<50ml/min, amenorrhea – due to cyclophosphamide, active disease • RA and scleroderma - lower birth rates compared with the general population • NSAIDs – stop when trying to conceive • Assisted reproductive techniques – increase risk of flare and thrombotic events – particularly SLE Systemic Lupus Erythematosis • Plan pregnancy after remission for 6 months – active lupus = inc risk of flare – Active lupus nephritis and LN in remission = inc risk flare – The higher Cr, the greater risk of deterioration • Lupus flares generally non-severe = arthralgias, rash, mild hematologic issues – Severe flare with organ damage can occur • Unless contraindicated, continue hydroxychloroquine – Protects against organ damage, flares, thrombosis, bone mass loss, long-term survival Systemic Lupus Erythematosis • Risk of multiple medical and obstetrical complications during pregnancy, especially those with active disease or nonreversible organ damage (CVA, CKD, PHTN, Mod/Sev CM, Sev Rest Lung Dz • Increased ESR due to high fibrinogen production in liver • C3 and C4 rise in pregnancy – increased liver production (can be normal in active SLE) • Pts with protein loss due to LN may have increased proteinuria due to increased renal blood flow without indicating active LN (expect double proteinuria levels) Effect of SLE on Pregnancy • 20 fold increased risk of maternal mortality, inc rate of HTN, diabetes, renal impairment, PHTN, major infections, thrombotic events, hematologic complications than general population • 2-4 fold higher risk of preeclampsia, c-section, preterm labor, IUGR (particularly in pts with chronic HTN, renal impairment, high dose steroids) – Those with SLE in remission without major organ issues likely have normal pregnancy • 25% of SLE pregnancies end in preterm delivery • 6-35% incidence of small for gestational age babies • Miscarriage in 20% (risk inc with HTN, proteinuria >500mg/d, low plt, APS) • 3-4 fold increased chance of preeclampsia Rheumatoid Arthritis and Other Arthritis • 50-66% women with RA and the majority of women with psoriatic arthritis and JIA improve in pregnancy. (When both RF and CCP+ = less likely to improve) • Women with ankylosing spondylitis stay unaltered during pregnancy. • Postpartum flares can occur within the first 4 months (new onset RA 3-5 fold more likely to occur here) • Women with active disease have a higher risk of preterm delivery and small for gestational age babies. • RA has a higher risk of hypertensive disorders during pregnancy. • Children more likely small for gestational age, preterm, lower birth weight Scleroderma • Pregnancy does not seem to affect disease activity in the majority of patients (63-72%). – 1/3 will improve or worsen during pregnancy • Associated with higher risk of hypertensive disorders and higher rates of adverse pregnancy outcomes. (preeclampsia)(Monitor for renal crisis) • Raynauds improves, GERD worsens, Skin stays stable or improves (may worsen postpartum) • Recent onset dz, diffuse cutaneous dz, SCL70, RNA polymerase 3 = increased risk of more active disease. Scleroderma • Pts with marked malabsorption, CKD (Cr>2.5-2.8), PHTN, mod/sev CM (EF<30-40%), or severe RLD are at highest risk of medical and obstetric complications and should be counseled against conception • Renal crisis rate is same, but may need to treat with ACE inh if it occurs • Previous renal crisis does not contraindicate further pregnancy, but should delay for several years after stabilized. • Corticosteroid for lung maturation should not be given, may precipitate renal crisis. • SSC associated with increased risk of preterm delivery (14-29%) – Inc risk of IUGR, miscarriage Vasculitis • If in remission prior to pregnancy, low rate of complications and good pregnancy outcomes are reported. • Hypertensive disorders, including preeclampsia, are associated with poorer outcomes. • ESR not reliable, but CRP is reliable • RX – Low dose steroids (<7.5-10mg) and azathioprine. CYC if life threatening disease (contraindicated in 1st and early 2nd trimesters – may need IVIG during this time period) • Behcet’s – mild ulcers to severe CNS involvement or thrombosis(V/A). Antiphospholipid Syndrome • Antiphospholipid antibodies represent one of the major risk factors for poor obstetric outcome. – incr risk of preeclampsia, IUGR, prematurity, miscarriage – Recheck aPL shortly prior to pregnancy in SLE • Double or triple positive antibodies, and/or those with thrombotic antiphospholipid syndrome have the worst obstetric outcomes. • Rx – LDA, LMWH – for recurrent early miscarriage, or previous fetal death >10 weeks gestation and/or preterm <34 weeks Undifferentiated Connective Tissue Disease, Polymyositis,/Dermatomyositis, Mixed Connective Tissue Disease • Outcomes for UCTD and MCTD resemble those of SLE. (increased risk of preeclampsia, IUGR, preterm delivery) • Active PM and DM is associated with preterm delivery and pregnancy loss. – 50% will flare Neonatal Lupus • In Anti-Ro and/or anti-La can cause neonatal lupus syndrome affecting skin, heart, liver, cytopenias • Cutaneous neonatal lupus is seen in approximately 5% of offspring (resolve 3-6 months after birth), whereas congenital heart block is seen in about 2% (risk is 18% if prior child with CHB, 50% if 2 prior children with CHB) – risk of perinatal death is 20% - will need permanent pacemaker if survives. – Abs cross placenta between 16th-30th week gestation • Repeated fetal echocardiograms from the 16th week of gestation recommended • Rx – Fluorinated steroids – betamethasone and dexamethasone (less metabolized by the placenta) Pregnancy Management Plan • Pre-pregnancy assessment is vital. • Emphasis on previous obstetric and medical history, serology profile, disease activity, and extent of organ damage. • Monitor UA for proteinura, assess HTN, labs – DNA, C3/4, CRP, CBC, Cr, LFTs • Higher risk of preeclampsia – may use LDA to decrease risk • Calcium 1 gm daily showed >50% reduction in risk of preeclampsia and 25% reduction in risk of preterm delivery • Antenatal and postnatal plan and multidisciplinary team input are essential to achieve good maternal and fetal outcomes. Postpartum • Close surveillance for 2-3 months after delivery is important owing to high risk of flare and thrombosis. • All women with aPL should receive prophylactic LMWH for at least 7 days after delivery • Counseling on contraception. Hydroxycholroquine • Crosses the placenta • Category C • Found in human breast mild. Infant may be exposed to 2% of maternal dose • Rec – Continue HCQ during pregnancy and lactation with SLE to help prevent flares Sulfasalizine • Crosses the placenta • Category B/D • Lactation – drug concentrations is 40% that of the maternal level. Use with caution. • Rec- Does not appear to increase the adverse fetal outcome or have adverse affects during lactation – Concomitant folate supplementation is recommended and the dose of SSZ should not exceed 2 gm per day. NSAID and LDA • Minimal fetal/maternal risk when use is limited to 1st to end of 2nd TM • Category C for 1st two TM • Lactation – Excreted in breast milk in small amounts. May be compatible with breast feeding, but use with caution – See drug information guide for each drug • Recs – avoid NSAIDs during planned conception cycle until pregnant. NSAIDs may be associated with an increased risk of spontaneous abortion before 20 weeks of gestation. Avoid after week 30. Glucocorticoids • Prednisone and prednisolone cross the placenta but appear in only small amounts in cord blood • Dexamethasone and betamethasone reach higher concentrations in the fetus • Prednisone is cat B. Other GC are cat C. • May increase risk of cleft palate, adrenal hypoplasia • May increase risk of premature rupture of membranes, intrauterine growth restriction • In MOM – pregnancy induced HTN, gest DM, OP, infection • Lactation – excreted in breast milk. Discard breast mild for first 4 hours after pred dose >20mg. • Recs – use lowest dose. Try to avoid during first TM when hard palate is forming. May need stress dose during labor, delivery, and immediately postpartum. Azathioprine • Cat D • 64-93% of AZA mother dose in fetal blood as inactive metabolite – Placenta metabolizes AZA to thiouric acid – which is inactive – Fetal liver lacks enzyme inosinate pyrophosphorylase which is necessary to convert AZA and 6-MP to active metabolites • Study of 101 pregnancies revealed no association with poor pregnancy outcomes at doses of 100mg/d • Recs – Manufacturer insert state excreted in breast milk. More recent data suggests -Very low excretion in breast milk. TNF inh • Pregnancy outcome, preterm birth rates, spontaneous abortions, congenital abnormalities similar to women with RA • A case report suggested a possible association with VACTERL (Vertebral anomaly, Anal atresia, Cardiac defects, Tracheoesophageal fistula, Esophageal atresia, Renal anomalies, Limb dysplasia) • Category B • Lactation – insuf data • Recs – Discontinue TNF inh prior to conception IVIG • Crosses the placenta after 30-32 weeks of gestation • Category C • Lactation – Not known • Recs – Reasonable to use during some preg Cyclosporine • Little or no transplacental transfer in some reports – other yes • Risk of teratogenicity is low • Assoc with lower birth weights, inc maternal DM, HTN, renal allograft rejection • A report on 6 infants born to mother on cyclosporine found that T, B, NK cell development and maturation were impaired with effects still seen at 1 year – without development of predominant health problems at reproductive age • Category C • Lactation – is excreted in milk – not rec to breast feed • Recs – When needed, use lowest dose. Tacrolimus • Cat C • Lactation - not rec • Long-term immunomodulatory effect on offspring not known. Use smallest dose. Monitor BP and renal fxn. Cyclophosphamide • Risk of infertility and amenorrhea associated with med • Risk of ovarian failure depends on age - >31yo = highest risk; also accumulative dose • Animals – exopthalmos, cleft palate, skeletal abn, fetal resorption, growth retardation, • Risk of teratogenicity is high ~20% • Used only when disease poses grave health threat to mother • Normal children have been born to offspring exposed to CYC • Risk of terat highest during 1st TM • Cat D • Lactation – avoid • Recs – avoid except in life threatening disease without other alternatives available Chlorambucil • Rodents – bone formation defects, renal hypoplasia • Case reports of healthy infants • Cat D • Lactation – not rec • Recs – Strongly rec avoiding Methotrexate • Folate antagonist – inhibits dihydrofolate reductase and thus interferes with folic acid metabolism and purine synthesis • Embryotoxic in early preg • Skeletal abnormalities and cleft palate later in preg • Hydrocephalus, anecephaly, menigomyelopathy, congenital stenosis of tubular bones, abn facial features, delayed ossification • Rate of cong abn 9-17% • Widely distributed in maternal tissues • Persists in liver up to 4 months after exposure • Discontinue med 3-4 months prior to conception • Continue folic acid through preg • Cat X • Lactation- contraindicated • Recs – Strongly rec against use during preg or lactation Mycophenolate Mofetil • Cleft lip/palate, microtia and external auditory canals, anomalies – distal limbs, heart, esophagus, kidneys • Inc in 1st TM miscarriages • Cat D • Should discontinue at least 6 weeks before conception is attempted • Lactation – avoid • Recs – don’t use Leflunomide • T1/2 15 days • Teiflunomide (=major metabolite) undergoes extensive enterohepatic circulation and remains detectable in serum for up to 2 years • Eliminate with use of cholestyramine 8g TID for 11d and confirm level <0.02mg/L on 2 tests 2 weeks apart • Embryotoxic and marked teratogenicity in animal studies • Cat X • Lactation – avoid • Recs - Avoid Lef up to 2 years before preg. Do not use during preg or lactation. Wait at least 3 menstrual cycles after cholestyramine before attempting conception Anakinra • Recombinant human interleukin 1 receptor antagonist • Cat B • Lactation – Insuf data –avoid • Recs – avoid preg and lact Rituximab • Chimeric monoclonal ab • Peripheral B cell depletion by targeting CD20 antigen on B lymphocytes • Detected in high concentrations in umbilical blood • Cat C • Lactation – Insuf data – avoid • Recs – avoid preg and lact Abatacept • • • • • CTLA4-Ig is an inhibitor of T-cell co-stimulation Not teratogenic in animals Cat C Lactation – insuf data Recs – Avoid in preg and lact Tocilizumab • • • • • Interleukin 6 receptor inhibitor Animals – may cause fetal harm Cat C Lact – insuf data Recs – avoid in preg and lact Summary - Medications • Azathioprine, plaquenil, sulfasalizine, ciclosporin, and tacrolimus, IVIG are safe in pregnancy and lactation. • Steroids are safe but can have increased side effects and complications if used for prolonged periods and at doses >7.5mg daily. Limited boluses are safe. – Nonfluorinated steroids (prednisone, methylprednisolone, hydrocortisone) are largely metabolized by placenta and thus minimal amounts reach fetal circulation – Cat B – Dexamethasone and betamethasone cross the placenta with similar maternal and fetal concentrations – Cat C – At high doses of prednisone >20mg daily, wait until 4 hours after the dose to breastfeed. Summary - Medications • Biologics – TNF inhibitors may be safe in the 1st and 2nd trimesters and lactation. • Avoid – MTX, Arava, Rituxan, Cellcept, Cyclophosphamide, Endothelin receptor antagonisits, bisphosphonates • Unknown – abatacept, tocilizumab, belimumab • NSAIDs are class B for intermittent use, but D if >30 weeks gestation Summary - Medications • Mild disease – Low dose prednisone 5-15 mg per day, Plaquenil, SSZ • Moderate to Severe disease – Plaquenil, GC, Azathioprine, Cyclosporine, IVIG • Life-threatening disease – High dose GC, Cyclosporine, Azathioprine, 6mercaptopurine, – Cyclophosphamide if no other alternative available • Avoid Leflunomide, Methotrexate, chlorambucil , mycophenylate mofetil References • Ateka-Barrutia O, et al. Management of Rheumatologic Diseases in Pregnancy. Int J Clin Rheumatol. 2012;7(5):541-558. • Temprano K, et al. Anti-rheumatic Drugs in Pregnancy and Lactation. Semin Arthritis Rheum 2005;35:112-121. • Bermas B. Use of Anti-inflammatory and Immunosuppressive Drugs in Rheumatic Diseases During Pregnancy and Lactation. UpToDate 2013.