Guest guest Posted June 11, 2005 Report Share Posted June 11, 2005 Hospital for Special Surgery " Pregnancy in Autoimmune and Musculoskeletal Disease " : A. Paget, MD: Are there any medications a patient with rheumatoid arthritis can take during the pregnancy? Sammaritano, MD: Sure there are, and when talking about medicine and pregnancy, I guess overall the idea is looking at it as a spectrum. There are medications that have been around for a long time, such as corticosteroids, where we observed patients for many, many years and feel that low to moderate doses, especially, are fine during pregnancy. They have their own set of side effects in terms of internal problems, but in terms of fetal development and fetal problems, they tend not to affect the fetus. So, when possible, we rely on low-dose steroids during pregnancy for women with rheumatoid arthritis, unlike pre-pregnancy or postpregnancy. There are other medications. The common medication used for rheumatoid arthritis, methotrexate, merits special attention, because that is actually contraindicated totally during pregnancy. It causes craniofacial and limb deformity in developing fetuses, and so that needs to be stopped three months before one becomes pregnant. It is important for patients to realize that ahead of time, and it is actually something that I address with patients when I start them on a remittive drug. You know, since a lot of these woman are young, of child-bearing age, it is important to address this even when making a decision about what medication might be best to start with. A. Paget, MD: So, in general, in most patients with rheumatoid arthritis you try to stop all of the medications except the steroids? Sammaritano, MD: I do. Anti-inflammatories are not as well studied during pregnancy as is aspirin, which has been around for a long time. They are probably okay to take during pregnancy up until the last couple of months; at that point you need to worry about affects on the fetus in terms of ductus arteriosis and premature closure that can cause pulmonary hypertension in the fetus. And they can also prolong labor. Before that, a lot of patients will take anti-inflammatories if needed; probably ibuprofen is considered the safest one. Personally, I have found that for the degree of response, 5 mg of prednisone tends to give a better response in many patients, probably with less potential for side effects. A. Paget, MD: What about some of our newer medications, the anti-TNF medications such as etanercept and inflixamab? Is there is enough information to demonstrate safety or lack of? Sammaritano, MD: No, there is not enough information to demonstrate either of those. I think that, in general, one would hope that just by virtue of remission occurring that it would be possible to discontinue that medication. It is difficult to note, because it is so new. And it's not that a controlled study will ever be done on these medications during pregnancy. I think the FDA has actually classified Enbrel as Category B in pregnancy, which means actually that there is no data that says it's a bad thing, no data in animals, for example, that show a lot of deformity or other problems. I try to stop it. If the patient has very severe disease, though, I think you have to weigh the potential risks versus the benefit and make that decision. http://www.hss.edu/Professionals/Conditions/Autoimmune-Diseases/Autoimmune-Pregn\ ancy Not an MD I'll tell you where to go! Mayo Clinic in Rochester http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester s Hopkins Medicine http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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