Article Text

Download PDFPDF

CS-03 Hydroxychloroquine in lupus pregnancy: a meta-analysis of individual participant data
Free
  1. Amanda M Eudy1,
  2. Michelle Petri2,
  3. Rebecca Fischer-Betz3,
  4. Abeer Mokbel4,
  5. Cecilia Nalli5,
  6. Laura Andreoli5,
  7. Angela Tincani5,
  8. Yair Molad6,
  9. Dafna Gladman7,
  10. Murray Urowitz7,
  11. Stephen Balevic1 and
  12. Megan EB Clowse1
  1. 1Duke University Medical Center
  2. 2Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
  3. 3University Hospital Duesseldorf
  4. 4Cairo University Hospital
  5. 5Spedali Civili and University of Brescia
  6. 6Tel Aviv University
  7. 7University of Toronto

Abstract

Background Our current knowledge about how to treat lupus in pregnancy derives from small prospective or retrospective cohorts. The goal of this individual participant meta-analysis was to pool data from multiple prospective cohorts to answer the clinical question of whether hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) treatment affects pregnancy outcomes.

Methods The literature was searched for prospective cohorts of pregnancies among women with lupus. HCQ use was defined as use any time during pregnancy. Outcomes of interest included fetal loss, preterm birth, high disease, and preeclampsia. Data from each cohort were collected and analyzed individually. Pooled ORs were calculated by random-effect models in Review Manager. Due to multiple pregnancies per patient, one pregnancy was randomly selected per patient. Primary analysis included only women with first trimester visits (6 cohorts). Subgroup analyses were stratified by a history of nephritis, APS, and disease activity at first clinic visit.

Results The literature was searched for prospective cohorts of pregnancies among women with lupus. HCQ use was defined as use any time during pregnancy. Outcomes of interest included fetal loss, preterm birth, high disease, and preeclampsia. Data from each cohort were collected and analyzed individually. Pooled ORs were calculated by random-effect models in Review Manager. Due to multiple pregnancies per patient, one pregnancy was randomly selected per patient. Primary analysis included only women with first trimester visits (6 cohorts). Subgroup analyses were stratified by a history of nephritis, APS, and disease activity at first clinic visit.

Abstract CS-03 Table 1

Pooled odds ratios for the association of hydroxychloroquine use and pregnancy outcomes

Conclusions Our results suggest that among patients with lupus nephritis, HCQ use may decrease the risk of fetal loss. The heterogeneity of data collection suggests the need for a unified approach to identify larger cohorts of lupus pregnancies.

Statistics from Altmetric.com

Request Permissions

If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.