Title: Pregnancy and Pregnancy Outcomes in Women With IBD
1Pregnancy and Pregnancy Outcomes in Women With
IBD
2Effects of IBD on Pregnancy Outcomes
- Preterm birth
- ? risk in both UC and CD1,2,5
- 4 of 5 studies no major impact on risk of
congenital abnormalities1-5 - Significant ? in risk of low birth weight2-5
- ? risk of maternal/delivery complications5
1Baird DD, et al. Gastroenterology.
199099987-994. 2Dominitz JA, et al. Am J
Gastroenterol. 200297641-648. 3Porter RJ,
Stirrat GM. Br J Obstet Gynaecol.
1986931124-1131. 4Fonager K, et al. Am J
Gastroenterol. 1998932426-2430.4Mahadevan U, et
al. Gastroenterol. 20071331106-1112
3Meta-analysis
- 12 studies
- N 3907 (CD 1952, UC 1113) vs. 320, 531
- Prematurity OR 1.87 (1.52-2.31) plt0.001
- LBW OR 2.10 (1.38-3.19) , plt0.001
- C-section OR 1.50 (1.26-1.79) p lt0.001
- Congen Abnorm. 2.37 (1.47-3.82) p lt0.001
- 4 studies reported on the incidence IBD vs.
controls, no difference - UC vs. controls in two studies (Larzilliere
1998, Dominitz)
Cornish Gut 200601-8.
4Effect of Pregnancy on UC Disease Activity at
Conception
80
n528
n227
66
70
60
50
45
Percent
40
34
27
30
24
20
10
0
NoRelapse
Relapse
WorsenedActivity
Continued Activity
DecreasedActivity
Inactive
Active
Miller JP. J R Soc Med. 198679221-225.
5Effect of Pregnancy on CD Disease Activity at
Conception
80
73
n186
n93
70
60
50
Percent
40
34
33
32
27
30
20
10
0
NoRelapse
Relapse
WorsenedActivity
Continued Activity
DecreasedActivity
Inactive
Active
Miller JP. J R Soc Med. 198679221-225.
6Disease activity during pregnancy in women with
IBD
- Majority of patients have inactive to mild
disease during pregnancy
Disease activity in Crohns disease
Percentage of patients
Disease activity in ulcerative colitis
Trimester
Mahadevan U, et al. Gastroenterol.
20071331106-1112
7Effect of Pregnancy on IBD Maternal-Fetal HLA
Disparity
- Prepartum disease activity significantly predicts
disease activity during pregnancy (P.008) - In single-locus disparity, no significant
difference between DR and DQ prepartum, during
trimesters 1-3, or postpartum - Disparity at both DR and DQ loci significantly
predicts disease activity during pregnancy
(P.001) - Maternal immune response to paternal HLA antigens
may play role in pregnancy-induced remission of
IBD
Kane S, et al. Gastroenterology. 1998114A1006.
Abstract G4121.
8Concerns Regarding Pregnancy and Delivery
- What is the effect of pregnancy on pouch
function before and after delivery? - Should the woman deliver vaginally or have
cesarean section? - Are there unique concerns if cesarean section is
performed?
9Delivery Mode and Perineal Injury
- Study indicates that more women with IBD have
cesarean sections1 - Vaginal delivery is usually safe for women with
inactive perianal symptoms1
1Ilnyckyji A, et al. Am J Gastroenterol.
1999943274-3278.
10Pouch Function During and After Pregnancy
- 10 vaginal deliveries, 6 cesarean sections
- No pouch complications
- 8.1 bowel movements/day during pregnancy vs
6.5/day postpartum - 3 women had incontinence during pregnancy, 1
frequent and 2 mild - 1 woman had nighttime incontinencepostpartum
Scott HJ, et al. Int J Colorectal Dis.
19961184-87.
11Pregnancy, Delivery, and Pouch Function After
IPAA in UC
- Questionnaires sent to women with IPAA for UC
- Results
- 49 deliveries for 29 women (25 vaginal, 24
c-sections) - 6 pouch-related complications (2 during
pregnancy 4 postpartum) - ? stool frequency and incontinence during
pregnancy - 83 regained prepregnancy function 17 had some
permanent pouch function deterioration not
related to delivery method - Delivery method did not affect incontinence,
stool frequency - Conclusion Pregnancy is safe for women with IPAA
Ravid A, et al. Dis Colon Rectum.
2002451283-1288.
12IBD in Pregnancy Summary
- Pregnancy outcomes best if patient in remission
at time of conception, though even patients in
remission can have higher rates of adverse
outcomes compared to the general population - IBD increases the risk of preterm birth and low
birth weight and maternal complications - No significant increase in risk of congenital
abnormalities - Women with IBD have a higher rate of cesarean
sections - Pregnancy may not increase the risk of relapse or
significantly increase disease activit