| Literature DB >> 34104857 |
Shadan Lalezari1, Assaf A Barg1,2,3, Rima Dardik1, Jacob Luboshitz1, Dalia Bashari1, Einat Avishai1, Gili Kenet1,2,3.
Abstract
Aim Very little is known regarding reproductive choices, pregnancy, and delivery of women with moderate to severe hemophilia. Our aim was to describe our experience with three hemophiliac women and their journey to achieve motherhood. Methods Medical charts of women with moderate to severe hemophilia A treated at our center were evaluated. Data regarding choices of conception, pregnancy course, mode of delivery, and pregnancy outcomes were obtained. Results Three women are presented. Whereas patient 1 chose to adopt her first child and later had twins through egg donations and a surrogate mother, patient 2 underwent spontaneous pregnancy and delivered via cesarean section. Patient 3 preferred in vitro fertilization and preimplantation genetic diagnosis to avoid hemophilia and hemophilia carriership in her offspring. Conclusion The appropriate means to achieve parenthood for women with moderate to severe hemophilia should be individualized and requires support of a comprehensive multidisciplinary team. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, permitting unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction so long as the original work is properly cited. ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ).Entities:
Keywords: carriers; childbirth; hemophilia; pregnancy; reproduction; women
Year: 2021 PMID: 34104857 PMCID: PMC8169315 DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1730036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: TH Open ISSN: 2512-9465
Case reports of pregnancy management, labor, and postpartum treatment of women with HA
| Hemophilia severity | IV FVIII Tx during pregnancy | Delivery | Analgesia | IV FVIII Tx—delivery and postpartum | Offspring | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Dhar et al
| Severe | Prophylaxis 30 IU/kg × 2/week | Spontaneous vaginal | Epidural | Bolus 50 IU/kg then | Female, not hemophilia carrier |
|
Sharma et al
| Severe | Prophylaxis 40 IU/kg × 2/wk | Induced vaginal | General | 25 IU/kg × 3/day 25 IU/kg × 2/day (days 2–5), 25 IU/kg/d (days 6–14), every other day for another 4 weeks | Female, |
|
Bodrozic et al
| Severe | On demand for bleeds 20 IU/kg | Planned cesarean section | General anesthesia | 50 IU/kg predelivery. | Female, not hemophilia carrier |
| PT #2 | Moderate | Prophylaxis 35 IU/kg × 3/wk | Semi-elective cesarean | General anesthesia | 2,000 IU FVIII × 2 on day of delivery, 2,000 IU × 1/day for a week and every other day for another week, | Male hemophiliac |
| PT #3 | Severe | Prophylaxis 35 IU/kg × 2/wk | Emergency cesarean section | Epidural | 2,000 IU × 2 on day 0, then 2,000 IU × 1/day for 3 days, 2,000 IU every other day for a week + tranexamic acid for 2 weeks | Female, not hemophilia carrier |
Abbreviations: CI, continuous infusion; FVIII, factor VIII; IU, international units; IV, intravenous; Tx, treatment.