Disease course after pregnancy in women with progressive multiple sclerosis symptoms
Jessica Shipley, Heidi N Beadnall, Paul G Sanfilippo, Dana Horakova, Cavit Boz, Alexandre Prat, Serkan Ozakbas, Tomas Kalincik, Izanne Roos, Ayse Altintas, Sara Eichau, Olga Skibina, Raed Alroughani, Francesco Patti, Masoud Etemadifar, Alessandra Lugaresi, Valentina Tomassini

TL;DR
This study found that pregnancy does not significantly affect long-term disability in women with progressive multiple sclerosis.
Contribution
The study is the first to investigate pregnancy's impact on disability progression in women with progressive MS.
Findings
Pregnancy history was not linked to significant changes in disability for women with PPMS or SPMS.
Long-term disability trajectories remained similar between pregnant and non-pregnant women with progressive MS.
Findings suggest pregnancy does not alter the disease course in progressive MS.
Abstract
The impact of pregnancy on disease outcomes has not been characterised in women with progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) phenotypes. This study aimed to describe the clinical characteristics and disease course of women who experienced a pregnancy after a diagnosis of primary progressive MS (PPMS) or secondary progressive MS (SPMS). This multicentre observational cohort study utilised data from the international MSBase Registry extracted on 2 June 2024. Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) scores of women with progressive MS were assessed up to 10 years postpartum and compared to those of propensity score–matched women with progressive MS without a pregnancy history. In total, 138 women with 164 pregnancies were included in the study, comprising 75 women with PPMS and 63 with SPMS. Of these, 24 women with PPMS and 47 with SPMS had longitudinal peri-pregnancy EDSS assessments and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultiple Sclerosis Research Studies · Reproductive System and Pregnancy · Pregnancy-related medical research
