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A first pregnancy seems associated with a positive effect on the course of inflammatory bowel disease:data from a prospective pregnancy cohort

Authors :
van der Giessen, J.
Fuhler, G. M.
van der Woude, C. J.
van der Giessen, J.
Fuhler, G. M.
van der Woude, C. J.
Source :
van der Giessen , J , Fuhler , G M & van der Woude , C J 2021 , ' A first pregnancy seems associated with a positive effect on the course of inflammatory bowel disease : data from a prospective pregnancy cohort ' , Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology , vol. 56 , no. 6 , pp. 693-698 .
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objectives: The effect of pregnaSSncy on the course of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) remains controversial. We aimed to describe the disease course before and after a first pregnancy in IBD patients. Methods: We analyzed data from a prospectively followed-up pregnancy cohort (minimal follow-up of 7 years), with clinical, biochemical and endoscopic characteristics obtained pre-pregnancy, during pregnancy and post-pregnancy. Possible factors associated with relapse (disease activity during pregnancy, maternal age, smoking, alcohol use, pre-pregnancy BMI, mode of delivery, thiopurine use during pregnancy, biological use during pregnancy, combination of thiopurine and biological use during pregnancy, breastfeeding, IBD diagnosis, endoscopic scores) were scored. Results: One hundred twenty six patients (95 Crohn’s Disease [CD; 75%] and 31 Ulcerative Colitis/IBD unclassified [UC/IBD-U; 25%]) were enrolled, with one hundred pregnancies occurring in 100 primigravida patients. All pregnancies resulted in live birth. Twenty patients (20%) had a relapse during pregnancy. The median number of relapses/patient/year was 0.25 (IQR 0.5) and 0 (IQR 0.43) respectively before and after pregnancy (p =.00). For CD patients the median relapses/person/year was 0.25 (IQR 0.5) before and 0 (IQR 0.25) after delivery (p =.00), for UC/IBD-U patients there was no significant difference. In the post-partum period more UC patients relapsed compared to CD patients (68% vs 30.7%, p =.01). Seven-year IBD-course was unchanged in the 26 women who did not become pregnant. Conclusion: In this prospective observational cohort study, we found a lower rate of relapses in the 4 years after delivery compared to the 3 years prior to a first pregnancy. Post-partum, more UC patients experienced a relapse compared to CD patients.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
van der Giessen , J , Fuhler , G M & van der Woude , C J 2021 , ' A first pregnancy seems associated with a positive effect on the course of inflammatory bowel disease : data from a prospective pregnancy cohort ' , Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology , vol. 56 , no. 6 , pp. 693-698 .
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1338022289
Document Type :
Electronic Resource