Minireviews
Copyright ©The Author(s) 2023.
World J Clin Cases. Mar 16, 2023; 11(8): 1730-1740
Published online Mar 16, 2023. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v11.i8.1730
Table 1 Summary of prospective and nationwide studies regarding the safety of biologics and small molecules for pregnant women with inflammatory bowel disease
Biologics/small molecules
ECCO’s guideline[25]
Summary of recent prospective and nationwide studies
TNF inhibitors (monotherapy)Low riskThe PIANO registry predominantly including patients treated with TNF inhibitors found no increased risks of adverse maternal or fetal outcomes at birth or in the first year of life in pregnant women with IBD treated with biologics[20]. Two French nationwide studies reported no significant differences in the risk of pregnancy outcomes between pregnancies exposed to anti-TNF monotherapy and unexposed controls[21]. The risk of serious infection during the first 5 yr of life was not significantly different between children exposed to anti-TNF monotherapy and the unexposed population[22]
TNF inhibitors with thiopurinesThiopurine discontinuation may be consideredThe PIANO registry predominantly including patients treated with TNF inhibitors found no increased risks of adverse maternal or fetal outcomes at birth or in the first year of life in pregnant women with IBD treated with biologics combined with thiopurines[20]. Two French nationwide studies reported that patients on combination therapy were more likely to have preterm birth than unexposed controls[21]. Children exposed to combination therapies had a higher risk of serious infection during the first year of life[22]
VedolizumabLow risk, limited dataIn 50 vedolizumab-exposed pregnancies, the rates of live birth, miscarriage, and congenital malformations were 86%, 14%, and 0%, respectively. Infant vedolizumab level was not associated with the risk of infection during the first year of life[28]. The first prospective study comparing 24 pregnant women treated with vedolizumab, 82 with TNF inhibitors, and 224 with conventional therapy showed that the rate of spontaneous abortion (21%) was higher in the vedolizumab group than in the other groups[29]. In this study, disease activity at conception may affect the result. A Czech prospective study including 39 pregnant women with IBD exposed to vedolizumab during pregnancy showed that 90% of pregnancies ended in a live birth, 5% in spontaneous abortion, and 5% in therapeutic abortion. No significant differences in the risk of pregnancy outcomes were observed between vedolizumab- and TNF inhibitor-exposed populations[24]
UstekinumabLow risk, limited dataA Czech prospective study including 54 pregnant women treated with ustekinumab showed that 80% and 20% of patients resulted in live births and spontaneous abortions, respectively. The risk of pregnancy outcomes was not significantly different between ustekinumab- and anti-TNF-exposed controls[24]. An Israeli prospective study including 27 pregnancies exposed to ustekinumab, 52 exposed to TNF inhibitors, and 50 unexposed controls showed no significant differences in the rates of obstetrical maternal complications, preterm delivery, LBW, and first-year newborn hospitalization[23]. The manufacturer’s global safety database including 408 ustekinumab-exposed pregnancies with IMIDs showed that the rates of adverse pregnancy outcomes were comparable to those of United States general population[31]
JAK inhibitorsContraindicated (no mention of upadacitinib)Data from interventional studies of tofacitinib identified 11 patients with UC exposed to tofacitinib before/at the time of conception or during pregnancy and showed that 36% of patients delivered healthy newborns, 18% had a medical termination, and no cases of neonatal death, fetal death, or congenital malformation were reported[33]
OzanimodContraindicatedN/A
Calcineurin inhibitorsLow risk, limited dataN/A
Table 2 Summary of systematic review and meta-analyses regarding the safety profiles of biologics and small molecules for pregnant women with inflammatory bowel disease
Biologics/small molecules
ECCO’s guideline[25]
Summaries of recent systematic review and meta-analysis
TNF inhibitors (monotherapy)Low riskThere was an increased risk of preterm births, LBW, and cesarian section in patients with IBD treated with TNF inhibitors[27]. This study was limited in its understanding of whether anti-TNF monotherapy or its combination with thiopurines is associated with these risks
TNF inhibitors with thiopurinesThiopurine discontinuation may be considered on an individualized basisMeta-analyses including recent prospective studies that assess the risk of combination therapy for pregnant women with IBD are lacking
VedolizumabLow risk, limited dataWomen treated with vedolizumab had an increased risk of preterm births and early pregnancy loss compared with those unexposed to vedolizumab during pregnancy. No differences were observed in the number of live births or congenital abnormalities[26,30]. The systematic review and meta-analyses’ results may be biased by disease activity
UstekinumabLow risk, limited dataA meta-analysis including two case studies showed that women treated with ustekinumab had an increased risk of early pregnancy loss compared with those treated with TNF inhibitors[26]. The prevalence of adverse pregnancy events was likely to be overestimated due to the small number of studies in this meta-analysis
JAK inhibitorsContraindicated (no mention of upadacitinib)N/A
OzanimodContraindicatedN/A
Calcineurin inhibitorsLow risk, limited dataA meta-analysis including 4450 CNI-treated patients (4372 solid organ transplant recipients and 78 patients with IMIDs including IBD) showed that the rates of preterm delivery, LBW, and preeclampsia were 3–4 times greater than the rates in the general population. The risk of neonatal prematurity was higher in solid organ transplant recipients than in patients with IMIDs due to the higher risk of preeclampsia in solid organ transplant recipients. CNIs may be safer for pregnant women with immune-mediated diseases than for solid organ transplant recipients[38]