Poster Session II – Poster of Distinction II - A214 IN UTERO EXPOSURE TO BIOLOGIC THERAPIES AND EARLY INFANT HEALTH OUTCOMES AMONG CHILDREN BORN TO MOTHERS WITH INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE: A PROSPECTIVE STUDY
C Fung, V Srikanth, K O’Connor, V W Huang

TL;DR
This study examines the effects of biologic therapies used during pregnancy on infant health outcomes, finding some associations with NICU admission and low birthweight.
Contribution
The study provides new prospective data on the early-life health outcomes of infants exposed to biologics in utero.
Findings
Biologic-exposed infants had higher NICU admission rates compared to unexposed infants.
There was a trend toward higher low birthweight in biologic-exposed infants.
No significant differences were found in infection, hospitalization, or allergy rates in the first year of life.
Abstract
Biologic therapies represent an important therapeutic avenue for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) during pregnancy, and current guidelines recommend continuation of biologics throughout pregnancy. There are only a few studies following infants exposed to biologics in utero. This study aimed to evaluate the relationship between in utero biologic exposure and early-life health outcomes in infants born to mothers with IBD. We conducted a prospective cohort study of 145 mother-infant pairs from a tertiary care center. Biologic exposure during pregnancy was defined as documented maternal use of biologic therapies at any point during gestation. Infant outcomes assessed included birthweight, low birthweight (<2500g), gestational age, preterm birth (<37 weeks), APGAR scores, NICU admission, incidence of infections, hospitalizations, and allergy/atopy outcomes during the first year of life.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPregnancy and Medication Impact · Inflammatory Bowel Disease · Spondyloarthritis Studies and Treatments
