| Literature DB >> 32444984 |
Sandra Lopez-Leon1, Yvonne Geissbühler2, Meritxell Sabidó3, Moise Turkson4, Charlotte Wahlich5, Joan K Morris6.
Abstract
Neurologists managing women with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) need information about the safety of disease modifying drugs (DMDs) during pregnancy. However, this knowledge is limited. The present study aims to summarize previous studies by performing a systematic review and meta-analyses. The terms "multiple sclerosis" combined with DMDs of interest and a broad profile for pregnancy terms were used to search Embase and Medline databases to identify relevant studies published from January 2000 to July 2019.1260 studies were identified and ten studies met our inclusion criteria. Pooled risk ratios (RR) of pregnancy and birth outcomes in pregnancies exposed to DMDs compared to those not exposed were calculated using a random effects model. For spontaneous abortion RR = 1.14, 95% CI 0.99-1.32, for preterm births RR = 0.93, 95% CI 0.72-1.21 and for major congenital malformations RR = 0.86, 95% CI 0.47-1.56. The most common major congenital malformations reported in MS patients exposed to MS drugs were atrial septal defect (ASD) (N = 4), polydactyly (N = 4) and club foot (N = 3), which are among the most prevalent birth defects observed in the general population. In conclusion, interferons, glatiramer acetate or natalizumab, do not appear to increase the risk for spontaneous abortions, pre-term birth or major congenital malformations. There were very few patients included that were exposed to fingolimod, azathioprine and rituximab; therefore, these results cannot be generalized across drugs. Future studies including internal comparators are needed to enable treating physicians and their patients to decide on the best treatment options.Entities:
Keywords: Congenital malformations; Multiple sclerosis; Pregnancy; Preterm; Spontaneous abortions
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32444984 PMCID: PMC7419441 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-020-09913-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Flowchart depicting the study selection and record screening process
General characteristics
| Author (year) | Country, study period | Study design | Population based | Data source: name, type | Source of exposure information | Source of outcome information | N MS pregnant women included |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boskovic et al. [ | Canada, 1997–2004 | Longitudinal cohort | No, spontaneous contact /enrolment | Motherisk program | Teratogen information and counseling service at the Hospital for Sick Children | Reported by mother and verified, by the child’s pediatrician or family physician, | 16 IFN 12 Unexposed |
| De las Heras et al. [ | Spain, period not reported | Cohort, secondary use of dataa | No | NA, EMR | Neurological services of 16 hospitals | Same service | 34 Immunomodulator 54 Unexposed |
| Weber-Schoendorfer and Schaefer [ | Germany, 1996–2007 | No, spontaneous contact/enrolment | TIS Berlin | Teratology Information Service | Reported by mother and verified by her physician and/or the pediatrician | 31 GA 69 IFN 64 Unexposed | |
| Lu et al. [ | Canada, 1998–2009 | Cohort, secondary use of data through linkage | Yes provincial coverage | British Columbia (BC) MS database BC Perinatal Database Registry EHR | British Columbia MS database | BC Perinatal Database Registry | 15 IFN 6 GA 317 Unexposed |
| Ebrahimi et al. [ | Germany, 2006–2013 | Longitudinal cohort | No, national coverage | German pregnancy MS registry | Either through women responding to advertisements or actively recruited after referral by their treating clinicians or MS nurses | Telephone interview every 3 months or visits to the university-based outpatient clinic in Bochum | 101 Natalizumab No proper control for this meta-analysis (mixed treated (other than natalizumab) and untreated MS patients) |
| Herbstritt et al. [ | Germany, 2008–2013 | Longitudinal cohort | No national coverage | German pregnancy MS registry, registry | Either through women responding to advertisements or actively recruited after referral by their treating clinicians or MS nurses | Telephone interview every 3 months or visits to the university-based outpatient clinic in Bochum | 151 GA 95 Unexposed |
| Thiel et al. (2016) [ | Germany, January 2008 –December 2013 | Longitudinal cohort | No national coverage | German pregnancy MS registry, registry | Either through women responding to advertisements or actively recruited after referral by their treating clinicians or MS nurses | Telephone interview every 3 months or visits to the university-based outpatient clinic in Bochum | 251 IFN 194 Unexposed |
| Portaccio et al. [ | Italy, 2009–2015 and 2002–2008 | Longitudinal cohort | Yes | NA, EMR | Neurological services of 19 hospitals | Collected by neurologist during patients visits | 62 Natalizumab 87 Interferon 332 Unexposed |
| MacDonald [ | US, 2011–2015 | Cohort secondary use of dataa | Yes national coverage | Truven MarketScan database, claims | Commercially insured population and recorded in the data source | Infants kept in health plan of the mother and recorded in the data source | 574 DMD overallb 225 GA, 118 IFN, 39 Natalizumab, 19 DF, 18 Fingolimod 1075 Unexposed |
| Nguyen et al. [ | Worldwide, 2005–2016 | Cohort, secondary use of dataa | Yes | MSBase, EHR | Sites participating and entering data into MSBase | Same | 1178 DMD overall 350 IFN, 137 GA, 104 Natalizumab, 17 DF, 21 Fingolimod, 4 Azathioprine, 2 Rituximab/B-cell depletion, 886 Untreated |
DMD disease modifying drugs, DF dimethyl fumarate, EHR electronic health record, EMR electronic medical record, GA glatiramer acetate, IFN interferon, MS multiple sclerosis, NA not applicable
aSecondary use of data corresponds to data extraction
bAuthors did not stratify by type of DMD
Fig. 2a Meta-analysis spontaneous abortions: treated MS vs untreated MS. b Meta-analysis spontaneous abortions: treated MS vs untreated MS stratified by drug
Fig. 3a Meta-analysis pre-term birth: treated MS vs untreated MS. b Meta-analysis pre-term birth: treated MS vs untreated MS stratified by drug
Fig. 4a Meta-analysis major congenital malformations: treated MS vs untreated MS. b Meta-analysis major congenital malformations: treated MS vs untreated MS stratified by drug
Meta-analyses of prevalence in the different group studied
| Prevalence | LCI 95% | UCI 95% | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spontaneous abortions | |||||
| Untreated MS | 378/2805 | 10.9% | 5.2% | 18.3% | 96 (93–97) |
| All MS Drugs | 275/2006 | 11.6% | 7.4% | 16.7% | 88 (82–92) |
| Premature birth | |||||
| Untreated MS | 376/2666 | 12.1% | 7.4% | 17.7% | 73 (57–84) |
| All MS drugs | 247/2001 | 12.1% | 9.0% | 15.6% | 92 (86–95) |
| Major congenital malformationsa | |||||
| Untreated MS | 67/1691 | 4.2% | 2.7% | 6.1% | 61 (21–80) |
| All MS drugs | 33/1040 | 3.0% | 1.8% | 4.4% | 19 (0–58) |
Prevalence takes into account weights. I2 = 0–40% might not be important, 30–60% moderate heterogeneity, 50–90% substantial heterogeneity, 75–100% considerable heterogeneity
aDenominator = number of pregnancies
List of major malformations reported in the exposed patients to MS drugs
| Organs | Number of births with anomaly | Total number of exposed births | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 | Cardio-Pulmonar | 1 Atrioventricular Canal | 25 | Weber-Schoendorfer and Schaefer et al. [ |
| 1 Atrial septal defect | 77 | Ebrahimi et al. [ | ||
| 3 Atrial septal defects | 226 | Thiel et al. [ | ||
| 1 Pulmonary artery stenosis | 226 | Thiel et al. [ | ||
| 4 | Renal | 1 Ureteropelvic stenosis | 226 | Thiel et al. [ |
| 1 Pyloric stenosis | 136 | Herbstritt et al. [ | ||
| 2 Ureteral duplication | 226 | Thiel et al. [ | ||
| 136 | Herbstritt et al. [ | |||
| 9 | Skeletal | 4 Polydactyly | 75 | Portaccio et al. [ |
| 226 | Thiel et al. [ | |||
| 226 | Thiel et al. [ | |||
| 77 | Ebrahimi et al. [ | |||
| 1 Macrodactyly | 226 | Thiel et al. [ | ||
| 1 dysmelia of the tibia and fibulaa | 226 | Thiel et al. [ | ||
| 3 Club foot | 25 | Weber-Schoendorfer and Schaefer et al. [ | ||
| 54 | Portaccio et al. [ | |||
| 226 | Thiel et al. [ | |||
| 2 | 2 Down syndrome | 54 | Portaccio et al. [ | |
| 12 | Boskovic et al. [ | |||
| 1 | 1 Hernia** | 77 | Ebrahimi et al. [ | |
| 1 | 1 “Abnormality of the X Chromosome” | 12 | Boskovic et al. [ | |
| 1 | 1 Wolf Hirschhorn syndrome | 226 | Thiel et al. [ |
aAuthor does not specify whether this is a major or minor malformation, does not specify what type of hernia