Women with Lupus Can Have Successful Pregnancies
Reported November 9, 2011
(Ivanhoe Newswire) – Promising research may offer hope for women with lupus who
once believed that pregnancy was too risky. According to this study, most women
with stable lupus can have successful pregnancies.
"There was a misconception, based on outdated experience, that women with lupus
should not try to have children," Jane Salmon, M.D., the study's senior author
and Collette Kean Research Chair at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York
City, was quoted as saying. "Now that our treatments are more effective and we
have a better understanding of the disease, we can identify a window when
pregnancy is safe and outcomes are good for mother and fetus."
Historically, women with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) have been advised
not to become pregnant because of risks to their own and their fetus' health.
SLE is a chronic inflammatory disease, in which the body's own immune system
attacks tissues of the body and can cause complications during pregnancy.
Dr. Salmon, together with Jill Buyon from New York University Medical Center,
and their collaborators evaluated 333 pregnant women with lupus from the
PROMISSE Study (Predictors of pRegnancy Outcome: BioMarkers In antiphospholipid
antibody Syndrome and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus), which seeks to identify
biomarkers that predict poor pregnancy outcomes. The research team found that 80
percent of lupus patients had a favorable pregnancy outcome.
Patients with lupus may be free of symptoms for long periods of time and then
experience a disease "flare," when symptoms such as rash, joint pain, chest
pain, swollen legs, bruising and/or fatigue suddenly appear.
"Most women with stable lupus, defined as limited disease activity and no flares
during the time of conception and the first trimester, had successful
pregnancies," explained Dr. Salmon, who is also the principal investigator of
the PROMISSE Study. "We learn from these results that timing is a most important
element for successful pregnancy in women with lupus and that avoiding pregnancy
during periods of increased disease activity is essential."
In the study, two categories of pregnancy complications were evaluated: the
health of the mother and of the fetus. The research team studied development of
mild, moderate, or severe increases of lupus activity, or flares, in expectant
mothers. For the fetus, the study examined the worst outcome – death – or
situations in which the wellbeing of the child would require extended
hospitalization in a critical care unit.
Of the 333 women with lupus studied, 63 had poor outcomes. Ten percent of
mothers experienced preeclampsia, a serious complication characterized by the
onset of high blood pressure and appearance of protein in the urine. Ten percent
experienced mild or moderate flares at 20 weeks and eight percent experienced
flares at 32 weeks. Nineteen women experienced death of the fetus and 30 women
delivered before 36 weeks or had newborns of small gestational size – smaller in
size than normal for the baby's sex and gestational age, commonly defined as a
weight below the 10th percentile for gestational age.
SOURCE: American College of Rheumatology's 2011 Annual Scientific Meeting held
in Chicago on November 7 -8, 2011