A235 INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE AND PREECLAMPSIA: A PHYSICIAN SURVEY
Y Hanna, P Tandon, V Huang

TL;DR
This study explores how physicians perceive the risk of preeclampsia in pregnant women with inflammatory bowel disease and their willingness to prescribe aspirin for prevention.
Contribution
The study is the first to assess physician perceptions and aspirin prescribing patterns for preeclampsia prevention in inflammatory bowel disease patients.
Findings
Most healthcare professionals believe IBD increases preeclampsia risk.
Only 8% of HCPs thought aspirin could cause an IBD flare.
77% of HCPs agreed aspirin prophylaxis was safe even in poorly controlled IBD.
Abstract
Preeclampsia is a disorder of pregnancy recognized as the second cause of maternal mortality worldwide. The association between IBD and preeclampsia remains unclear, but the significant comorbid profile, and lack of treatment aside from urgent delivery, make primary prevention a priority. Aspirin was shown to halve preeclampsia rates and is recommended for primary prevention for women at risk. Despite high-quality evidence supporting Aspirin use and its well tolerated side effect profile, studies in non-IBD patients have demonstrated a knowledge-to-practice gap. While there are no studies reported in women with IBD, prescribing rates may be even lower in this population, given that it may be incorrectly perceived to increase the risk of an IBD flare. Understanding physician perceptions could allow for a targeted educational approach to increase patient and physician awareness of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPregnancy and Medication Impact · Eosinophilic Esophagitis · Inflammatory Bowel Disease
