【独家】最新研究:sle女性怀孕将不再冒大风险!
来源:纽约大学Longone医学中心/纽约大学医学院
摘要:新研究得出结论大部分患有红斑狼疮的女性当她们的病症不太活跃时可以安全怀孕。研究中发现了多个可能使患有系统性红斑狼疮(SLE或红斑狼疮)的女性怀孕有危险的风险因素。
新发现可能减轻患有红斑狼疮的女性想要生儿育女时的担忧。一项新的研究发现大部分患有红斑狼疮疾病的女性当她们的病症不太活跃时可以安全怀孕。研究成果于6月22日发表于《内科学年鉴》上。
之前医生们建议患有红斑狼疮的女性最好避免怀孕,因为这可能给她们自身和孩子的健康带来很多并发症。随着研究的深入,医生建议患者在病症稳定后再怀孕,但是直到现在这个建议是否正确以及建议对怀孕的结果是否有利还是不清楚。
研究中发现了多个可能使患有系统性红斑狼疮(SLE或红斑狼疮)的女性怀孕有危险的风险因素。包括红斑狼疮病症活跃、需要药物控制高血压、低血小板计数、以及妊娠前三个月时狼疮抗凝血试验阳性结果。病患人数少同样增加了风险。
“我被患有红斑狼疮的年轻女轻最经常问到的问题是怀孕是否安全,”医学博士,纽约大学Langone风湿病和狼疮病中心主任,该研究的第一作者Jill. P. Buyon说,“我们的研究在大多数患者处得到验证,如果狼疮病症在怀孕期间被有效控制的话,母亲和婴儿的健康是可以得到保障的。对于这些病患来说,怀孕可能是复杂的,但是我们已经可以阻止一些风险的发生。”
在这个多中心、多民族、多种族的研究中——被认为此类中规模最大的——研究人员跟踪调查了385名狼疮病孕妇,发现81%的孕妇情况并不复杂,有不到五分之一的女性会经历至少一个不良怀孕后果。令人欣慰的是,狼疮活动的爆发很少,而且值得注意的是,只有3%的女性有严重的情况发生。而且研究确定了可以帮助女性鉴别会有不良后果产生的因素,这对于那些没有这些因素的女性来说也是种安慰。
根据美国国家卫生研究院的报道,大约35万到50万的美国人患有红斑狼疮。这是一种人体免疫系统紊乱,错误的攻击健康组织而成的自身免疫性疾病,最终会导致皮肤、关节、肾脏、大脑、血液元素和其他组织的病症。表现为皮疹、发烧、关节疼痛肿胀,从轻微到严重,随后会有一段缓解期。
根据美国风湿病学院,该疾病通常开始于20多岁和30多岁,而且发生在女性身上的概率是男性的10倍。狼疮病常见于黑人,西班牙裔和亚洲人上。由于大多数狼疮患者有正常生育能力,所以怀孕问题很重要。
参与研究的女性年龄在18 至 45岁之间,她们在怀孕结果预测上进行了注册:抗磷脂抗体综合症的生物标记以及系统性红斑狼疮(PROMISSE)试验从2003年9月到2012年12月在美国8个站点和加拿大1个站点进行。所有参与者都在怀孕前三个月进行了注册。PROMISSE试验由美国国家关节炎研究所、美国国家卫生研究院肌肉骨骼和皮肤疾病中心(Grant # RO1 AR49772)资助。从2003年起,在首席研究员医学博士Jane Salmon的带领下展开。他也是该研究的主要作者之一。
研究人员在试验初期、怀孕第二个和第三个三期时对女性进行检测,以确定这些疾病活动是否发生。
不良的怀孕结果有早产(9%),第二次或第三次怀孕期间胎儿死亡(4%),因为怀孕问题导致的婴儿死亡(1%),和极低的婴儿出生体重(10%)。
Buyon博士警告说,这些发现不适用于那些怀孕期间有非常活跃的病症的患者,例如尿液中蛋白质水平非常高的,因为这意味着不受控制的肾脏疾病。这类患者被排除在这项研究中,他们通常被建议不要进行怀孕计划,直到病症得到更好的控制。
来源:Science Daily
翻译:“病患如我”社区
转载请注明来源“病患如我”社区
Pregnancy safer for women with lupus than previously thought
Risk factors identified for women more likely to have problems
New findings may help ease concerns for women with lupus who are interested in having a child. A new study concludes that most women with lupus whose disease is not very active will have a safe pregnancy. The results are to publish online June 22 in Annals of Internal Medicine.
It was previously suggested that women with lupus avoid pregnancy because of serious complications to their own health and the health of the baby. As more knowledge became available, doctors told women with lupus to wait until symptoms were under control, but until now, it was still uncertain whether this advice was right and whether pregnancy outcomes would be favorable.
The study identified several risk factors that might put some women with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE or lupus) at higher risk for bad outcomes in pregnancy. These factors include having active lupus disease, high blood pressure requiring medications for control, low platelet counts, and a positive lupus anticoagulant test result during the first trimester. Being a minority also added risk.
"One of the questions I'm most commonly asked by young women with lupus is whether it is safe to get pregnant," says lead study author Jill. P. Buyon, MD, director of the division of rheumatology and director of the Lupus Center at NYU Langone. "Our new study is quite reassuring in that in the majority of cases, both mother and baby can do well if lupus is under control at conception. For patients who may be facing a complicated pregnancy, we have been able to pin down some of the risk factors."
In this multicenter, multiethnic, and multiracial study -- which is believed to be the largest of its kind -- researchers followed 385 pregnant women with lupus and found that 81 percent of pregnancies were uncomplicated, with fewer than one in five women experiencing at least one poor pregnancy outcome. Also encouraging is that flares of lupus activity were very rare, and most notably, severe flares occurred in only 3 percent of all the women. Furthermore, the study identified factors that help in identifying women at risk for poor outcomes -- and is very reassuring for those who have no risk factors.
According to the National Institutes of Health, between 350,000 and 500,000 Americans may be affected by lupus, an autoimmune disease in which the body's immune system mistakenly attacks healthy tissue, and eventually affect the skin, joints, kidneys, brain, blood elements, and other organs. Flares can be rashes, fever, and arthritis pain and swelling that can range from mild to serious, followed by periods of remission.
The disease most often starts in people in their 20s and 30s and occurs 10 times more often in women than in men, according to the American College of Rheumatology . Lupus tends to be more common in black, Hispanic and Asian individuals. Pregnancy issues are important because most lupus patients have normal fertility.
Participants in the study were women between ages 18 and 45 enrolled in the Predictors of Pregnancy Outcome: Biomarkers in Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome and Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (PROMISSE) Trial between September 2003 and December 2012 from eight U.S. sites and one in Canada. All were enrolled during the first trimester of pregnancy. The PROMISSE trial, funded by the National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases of the National Institutes of Health (Grant # RO1 AR49772), began in 2003 under principal investigator Jane Salmon, MD, director of the Lupus and APS Center of Excellence and Collette Kean Research Chair at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York. Dr. Salmon is the senior author on the study.
Women were examined by researchers at the start of the trial, and during the second and third trimesters of pregnancy, to determine whether disease flares occurred.
Bad pregnancy outcomes included premature birth (9 percent), fetal death during the second or third trimester (4 percent), infant death because of problems with the pregnancy (1 percent), and very low birth weight (10 percent).
Dr. Buyon cautions that the findings may not apply to those with very active disease at conception, for example those with very high levels of protein in the urine because of ongoing uncontrolled kidney disease. Such patients were excluded from this study, and they are typically advised to forestall pregnancy planning until the disease is under better control.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from materials provided by NYU Langone Medical Center / New York University School of Medicine. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
来源:Science Daily
翻译:“病患如我”社区
转载请注明来源“病患如我”社区
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