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Disease Activity in Pregnant and Postpartum Women With Multiple Sclerosis Receiving Ocrelizumab or Other Disease-Modifying Therapies Publisher Pubmed

Summary: Study shows ocrelizumab and active natalizumab reduce MS relapse rates in pregnancy and postpartum compared to other therapies. #MultipleSclerosis #Pregnancy

Yeh WZ1, 2 ; Van Der Walt A1, 2 ; Skibina OG2, 3, 4 ; Kalincik T5, 6 ; Alroughani R7 ; Kermode AG8, 9, 10 ; Fabispedrini MJ8, 9 ; Carroll WM8, 10 ; Lechnerscott J11, 12 ; Boz C13 ; Ozakbas S14 ; Buzzard K3, 4 ; Habek M15, 16 ; John NA17, 18 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Yeh WZ1, 2
  2. Van Der Walt A1, 2
  3. Skibina OG2, 3, 4
  4. Kalincik T5, 6
  5. Alroughani R7
  6. Kermode AG8, 9, 10
  7. Fabispedrini MJ8, 9
  8. Carroll WM8, 10
  9. Lechnerscott J11, 12
  10. Boz C13
  11. Ozakbas S14
  12. Buzzard K3, 4
  13. Habek M15, 16
  14. John NA17, 18
  15. Prat A19
  16. Girard M19
  17. Duquette P19
  18. Baghbanian SM20
  19. Hodgkinson S21
  20. Van Pesch V22, 23
  21. Laureys G24
  22. Willekens B25, 26
  23. Prevost J27
  24. Foschi M28, 29
  25. De Gans K30
  26. Horakova D31
  27. Havrdova EK31
  28. Karabudak R32
  29. Patti F33, 34
  30. Mccombe PA35, 36
  31. Maimone D37
  32. Altintas A38
  33. Ampapa R39
  34. Spitaleri D40
  35. Gerlach OHH41, 42
  36. Sa MJ43, 44
  37. Hughes S45
  38. Gouider R46, 47
  39. Mrabet S46, 47
  40. Macdonell RA48
  41. Turkoglu R49
  42. Cartechini E50
  43. Alasmi A51
  44. Soysal A52
  45. Oh J53
  46. Murosle Rouzic E54
  47. Guye S54
  48. Pasquarelli N54
  49. Butzkueven H1, 2
  50. Jokubaitis VG1, 2
  51. Barnett M55
  52. Slee M56
  53. Van Hijfte L57
  54. Yamout B58
  55. Terzi M59
  56. Blanco Y60
  57. Grammond P61
  58. Izquierdo G62
  59. Besora S63
  60. Taylor B64
  61. Castillotrivino T65
  62. Sanchezmenoyo JL66
  63. Lugaresi A67
  64. Amato MP68
  65. Hardy T69
  66. Decoo D70
  67. Fragoso Y71
  68. Iuliano G72
  69. Gray O73
  70. Saladino ML74
  71. Grandmaison F75
  72. Sempere AP76
  73. Shaw C77
  74. Van Wijmeersch B78
  75. Csepany T79
  76. Solaro C80
  77. Alkhaboori J81
  78. Garber J82
  79. Dominguez JA83
  80. Piroska I84
  81. Mcguigan C85
  82. Cauchi M86
  83. Skromne E87
  84. Trevinofrenk I88
  85. Mason D89
  86. Sirbu CA90
  87. Etemadifar M91
  88. Nohara C92
  89. Cambron M93
  90. De Vecino MCA94
  91. Shalaby N95
  92. Field D96
  93. Agueramorales E97
  94. Khurana D98
  95. Matsumoto R99
  96. Shimizu F100
  97. Sinnige LGF101
  98. Cardenasrobledo S102

Source: Neurology: Neuroimmunology and NeuroInflammation Published:2024


Abstract

Background and ObjectivesWomen with multiple sclerosis (MS) are at risk of disease reactivation in the early postpartum period. Ocrelizumab (OCR) is an anti-CD20 therapy highly effective at reducing MS disease activity. Data remain limited regarding use of disease-modifying therapies (DMTs), including OCR, and disease activity during peripregnancy periods.MethodsWe performed a retrospective cohort study using data from the MSBase Registry including pregnancies conceived after December 31, 2010, from women aged 18 years and older, with relapsing-remitting MS or clinically isolated syndrome. Women were classified by preconception exposure to DMTs, including OCR, rituximab (RTX), natalizumab (NAT), stratified into active (NAT-A; continued ≥28 weeks of gestation, restarted ≤1 month postpartum) or conservative (NAT-C; continued ≤4 weeks of gestation, restarted >1 month postpartum) strategies, dimethyl fumarate (DMF) or low-efficacy DMTs (interferon-beta, glatiramer acetate). Annualized relapse rates (ARRs) were calculated for 12-month prepregnancy, pregnancy, and 6-month postpartum periods.ResultsA total of 2,009 live births from 1,744 women were analyzed, including 73 live births from 69 women treated with preconception OCR. For OCR, no within-pregnancy relapse was observed and 3 women (4.1%) experienced 1 relapse in the postpartum period (ARR 0.09 [95% CI 0.02-0.27]). For NAT-A, 3 (3.7%) of 82 women relapsed during pregnancy (0.05 [0.01-0.15]) and 4 (4.9%) relapsed during postpartum (0.10 [0.03-0.26]). However, for NAT-C, 13 (15.9%) of 82 women relapsed within pregnancy (0.32 [0.20-0.51]) and 25 (30.5%) relapsed during postpartum (0.74 [0.50-1.06]). In the low-efficacy DMT group, 101 (7.6%) of 1,329 women experienced within-pregnancy relapse (0.12 [0.10-0.14]), followed by an increase in postpartum relapse activity with 234 women (17.6%) relapsing (0.43 [0.38-0.48]). This was similarly seen in the DMF group with 13 (7.9%) of 164 women experiencing within-pregnancy relapse (0.12 [0.06-0.20]) and 25 (15.2%) of 164 relapsing postpartum (0.39 [0.26-0.57]). Our RTX cohort had 0 of 24 women experiencing within-pregnancy relapse and 3 (12.5%) of 24 experiencing postpartum relapse.DiscussionWomen treated with OCR or NAT-A were observed to have low relapse rates during pregnancy and postpartum. NAT-C was associated with increased risk of relapses. There was no within-pregnancy relapse in our RTX cohort, although we caution overinterpretation due to our sample size. An effective DMT strategy with a favorable safety profile for the mother and infant should be discussed and implemented well in advance of planning a family.Classification of EvidenceThis study provides Class III evidence that for women with relapsing-remitting MS or clinically isolated syndrome who become pregnant, ocrelizumab, rituximab, and natalizumab (continued ≥28 weeks of gestation and restarted ≤1 month postpartum) were associated with reduced risk of relapses, compared with other therapeutic strategies. © 2024 American Academy of Neurology.
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