4.7 Review

The impact of COVID-19 on pregnancy and therapeutic drug development

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 179, Issue 10, Pages 2108-2120

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bph.15582

Keywords

cardiovascular diseases; clinical trials; COVID-19; drug development; pre-eclampsia; pregnancy; vaccines

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Emerging data suggest that pregnant women with COVID-19 face higher risks of severe outcomes compared to non-pregnant women of similar age. Clinical studies have shown that COVID-19 may predispose pregnant women to conditions like pre-eclampsia, with mRNA vaccines offering a novel approach to vaccination in this population.
Emerging data show that pregnant women with COVID-19 are at significantly higher risk of severe outcomes compared with non-pregnant women of similar age. This review discusses the invaluable insight revealed from vaccine clinical trials in women who were vaccinated and inadvertently became pregnant during the trial period. It further explores a number of clinical avenues in their management and proposes a drug development strategy in line with clinical trials for vaccines and drug treatments for the drug development community. Little is known of the long-term effects of COVID-19 on the mother and the baby. Our hypothesis that COVID-19 predisposes pregnant women to pre-eclampsia or hypertensive disorders during pregnancy is supported by a clinical study, and this may also adversely impact a woman's cardiovascular disease risk later in life. It may also increase a woman's risk of pre-eclampsia in subsequent pregnancy. This is an ever-evolving landscape, and early knowledge for healthcare providers and drug innovators is offered to ensure benefits outweigh the risks. COVID-19 mRNA vaccines appear to generate robust humoral immunity in pregnant and lactating women. This novel approach to vaccination also offers new ways to therapeutically tackle disorders of many unmet medical needs.

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