Birth outcomes in women who have taken leflunomide during pregnancy

Wiley - Tập 62 Số 5 - Trang 1494-1503 - 2010
Christina Chambers1, Diana Johnson1, Luther K. Robinson2, Stephen R. Braddock3, Ronghui Xu4, Janina Lopez-Jimenez1, Nicole Mirrasoul1, Elizabeth Salas1, Yunjun Luo1, Shelia Jin4, Kenneth Lyons Jones1
1University of California San Diego and Rady Children's Hospital, San Diego, California
2University of Buffalo, Buffalo, New York
3University of Virginia, Charlottesville
4University of California, San Diego

Tóm tắt

AbstractObjectiveIn preclinical reproductive studies, leflunomide was found to be embryotoxic and teratogenic. Women treated with leflunomide are advised to avoid pregnancy; those who become pregnant are advised to reduce fetal exposure through a cholestyramine drug elimination procedure. The present study was undertaken to investigate pregnancy outcomes in women who received leflunomide and were treated with cholestyramine during pregnancy.MethodsSixty‐four pregnant women with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who were treated with leflunomide during pregnancy (95.3% of whom received cholestyramine), 108 pregnant women with RA not treated with leflunomide, and 78 healthy pregnant women were enrolled in a prospective cohort study between 1999 and 2009. Information was collected via interview of the mothers, review of medical records, and specialized physical examination of infants.ResultsThere were no significant differences in the overall rate of major structural defects in the exposed group (3 of 56 live births [5.4%]) relative to either comparison group (each 4.2%)(P = 0.13). The rate was similar to the 3–4% expected in the general population. There was no specific pattern of major or minor anomalies. Infants in both the leflunomide‐exposed and non–leflunomide‐exposed RA groups were born smaller and earlier relative to infants of healthy mothers; however, after adjustment for confounding factors, there were no significant differences between the leflunomide‐exposed and non–leflunomide‐exposed RA groups.ConclusionAlthough the sample size is small, these data do not support the notion that there is a substantial increased risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes due to leflunomide exposure among women who undergo cholestyramine elimination procedure early in pregnancy. These findings can provide some reassurance to women who inadvertently become pregnant while taking leflunomide and undergo the washout procedure.

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