| Literature DB >> 26246905 |
Guilherme Ramires de Jesus1, Claudia Mendoza-Pinto2, Nilson Ramires de Jesus1, Flávia Cunha Dos Santos1, Evandro Mendes Klumb3, Mario García Carrasco2, Roger Abramino Levy3.
Abstract
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic, multisystemic autoimmune disease that occurs predominantly in women of fertile age. The association of SLE and pregnancy, mainly with active disease and especially with nephritis, has poorer pregnancy outcomes, with increased frequency of preeclampsia, fetal loss, prematurity, growth restriction, and newborns small for gestational age. Therefore, SLE pregnancies are considered high risk condition, should be monitored frequently during pregnancy and delivery should occur in a controlled setting. Pregnancy induces dramatic immune and neuroendocrine changes in the maternal body in order to protect the fetus from immunologic attack and these modifications can be affected by SLE. The risk of flares depends on the level of maternal disease activity in the 6-12 months before conception and is higher in women with repeated flares before conception, in those who discontinue useful medications and in women with active glomerulonephritis at conception. It is a challenge to differentiate lupus nephritis from preeclampsia and, in this context, the angiogenic and antiangiogenic cytokines are promising. Prenatal care of pregnant patients with SLE requires close collaboration between rheumatologist and obstetrician. Planning pregnancy is essential to increase the probability of successful pregnancies.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26246905 PMCID: PMC4515284 DOI: 10.1155/2015/943490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autoimmune Dis ISSN: 2090-0430
Figure 1Pathogenesis in normal and SLE pregnancy.
Hormonal and immune response differences between normal pregnancies.
| Immune and hormonal response | Normal pregnancy | Lupus and pregnancy | Clinical manifestation associated |
|---|---|---|---|
| Th17: IL-17 | High | Higher increase | Preeclampsia and pregnancy loss |
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| Estradiol and progesterone | Higher in second and third trimester | Lower in second and third trimester | Impaired placental function and fetal loss |
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| IL-6 | Low at first trimester but high in the third trimester | Low in the three trimesters | Altered immune regulation from T cell to B cell |
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| IL-10 | Low in the trimester but high in the last trimester | High since preconception throughout pregnancy and still postpartum | Continuous B cell stimulation |
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| Treg cells | High | Low number and impaired function | Lupus activity |
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| Chemokines | Low | Higher serum concentrations | Increase pregnancy complications and lupus flares |
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| Ficolin-3 | Low | Increase | Haemolysis |
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| IFN- | Low | Higher concentration | Contribution to preeclampsia |
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| C4d | Low | Higher concentration | Low placenta weight and low birth weight |
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| Prolactin | Low | Higher concentration | Lupus activity |
IL: interleukin; Treg cells: T regulatory cells; CXCL: chemokine ligand; MIG: monokine induced by gamma interferon; IP-10: interferon gamma-induced protein 10; INF-α: interferon alpha; C4d: complement component.
Type of SLE flare during pregnancy, manifestations, risk factor, and conduction.
| Type of SLE flare during pregnancy | Manifestations | Risk factor | Management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mucocutaneous | High inflammatory rash often sparing the nasolabial folds | Anti-Ro/SSA, previous involvement | Topical corticosteroids or oral prednisone, HCQ |
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| Articular | Arthralgia, arthritis, carpal tunnel syndrome (related to pregnancy edema) | Anti-dsDNA positivity | HCQ, NSAID until 28th week, prednisone throughout |
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| Hematological | Cytopenias | aPL, Coombs, previous involvement | Leukopenia: discard drug-related; |
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| Renal | Hypertension, edema, proteinuria | aDNA, low C3 and C4 differentiate between APS microangiopathy and preeclampsia, previous involvement | Immunosuppressive treatment with corticosteroids; pulse-methyl prednisolone |
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| CNS | Wide range including depression and psychosis | CNS manifestation provided pregnancy | Antidepressants; pulse-methyl prednisolone |
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| Vascular | Cutaneous vasculitis | Previous involvement | Prednisone and azathioprine |
aPL: antiphospholipid antibodies; APS: antiphospholipid syndrome; CNS: central nervous system; HCQ: hydroxychloroquine; IVIG: intravenous immunoglobulin.
Features differentiating preeclampsia and lupus nephritis.
| Clinical and laboratory features | Preeclampsia | Lupus nephritis |
|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | After 20 weeks of gestation | Any time during pregnancy |
| Platelets | Low-normal | Low-normal |
| Complements | Normal-low | Rising titres |
| Anti-dsDNA | Absent or unchanged | Normal to raised |
| Creatinine | Normal to raised | Normal to raised |
| Serum uric acid | Elevated | Normal |
| 24-hour urine calcium | <195 mg/dL | >195 mg/dL |
| Urinary sediment | Inactive | Active |
| Other organs involved | Occasionally CNS or HELLP | Evidence of active nonrenal SLE |
| Response to steroids | No | Yes |
Figure 2Counselling and pregnancy planning for patients with lupus.
Recommendations for the use of medications for pregnancy planning.
| Medication | Recommendation for pregnancy planning | Indication | FDA 1979 class | Comment for using during pregnancy | Maternal adverse reactions | Fetal/neonatal adverse reactions | Lactation |
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| Aspirin (low dose) | Start before conception | Obstetric APS | B/C | 80–100 mg/d used isolated or in combination with LMWH | Bleeding | No | Allowed |
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| Azathioprine | Without stopping | Used in cases requiring immunosuppression and to save corticoid | D | 1–2,5 mg/Kg/d | Liver toxicity and bone marrow toxicity | No | Allowed |
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| Belimumab | Not start during pregnancy | Arthritis, other inflammatory | C | 10 mg/kg IV q2 weeks ×3 doses, | Reactivation of tuberculosis | No | Not allowed |
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| Cyclosporine A | C | Blood pressure monitor | Increase of blood pressure | Low birth weight | Not allowed | ||
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| Cyclophosphamide | Stop > 6 months before conception | Not allowed | X | Not allowed | |||
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| Fluorinated corticosteroids | It will be used in more advanced pregnancy | NLE and maturity of fetal lungs | B | Use betamethasone 12 mg/d for two days | Uncontrolled glycemic | No | Allowed |
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| Hydroxychloroquine | Keep the drug to prevent reactivation of lupus | Lupus, arthritis | N | 200–400 mg/d | Maternal skin hyperpigmentation | No | Allowed |
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| Leflunomide | Stop 3–6 months before conception | Not allowed | X | Not allowed | |||
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| Low-molecular weight heparin | Generally used | Obstetric APS | C | Used in prophylactic dose of 0.5 mg/Kg QID for OBAPS and in full dose 1 mg/Kg BID for thrombotic APS | Osteoporosis, thrombocytopenia | No | Allowed |
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| NSAID | Avoid since it may decrease | Arthritis, other inflammatory | C/D | Avoid in the 3rd trimester | Gastric bleeding | Premature closure of the ductus arteriosus, oligohydramnios | Allowed |
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| Methotrexate | Stop 3–6 months before conception | Not allowed | X | Not allowed | |||
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| Mycophenolate mofetil | Stop before conception | Not allowed | X | Not allowed | |||
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| Prednisone/prednisolone | Try to minimize dose due to maternal AEs | Lupus, arthritis, other inflammatory diseases | C | Inactivated in the placenta, minimize dose due to maternal AEs | Increase of blood pressure, osteopenia, gestational diabetes, immunosuppression, grooves. | Cleft lip sporadically Low birth weight | Allowed (if more than 40 mg, wait for 3 hours) |
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| Rituximab | Not start during pregnancy | Arthritis, other inflammatory | C | 375 mg/m²/IV q4 weeks | Reactivation of tuberculosis | No | Not allowed |
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| Statins | Stop before conception | Not allowed | X | Not Allowed | |||
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| ACEi | Stop before conception | Not allowed | D | Fetal death, renal dysfunction and oligohydramnios | Allowed | ||
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| Tacrolimus | Used in cases requiring immunosuppression | C | 0,1–0,2 mg/kg/d | Diabetes, increase of blood pressure, reactivation of tuberculosis | Increase of blood pressure, diarrhea, headache, renal dysfunction | Not allowed | |
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| Warfarin | Stop at conception | Not allowed | X | Allowed | |||
AEs: adverse events; APS: antiphospholipid syndrome; OBAPS: obstetric APS; ACEi: angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor.