4.3 Article

Treatment with low-dose prednisone in refractory obstetric antiphospholipid syndrome: A retrospective cohort study and meta-analysis

Journal

LUPUS
Volume 31, Issue 7, Pages 808-819

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/09612033221091401

Keywords

obstetric antiphospholipid syndrome; recurrent pregnancy loss; glucocorticoids; treatment

Categories

Funding

  1. Next-Val grant from IDIVAL [NVAL 17/19]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study retrospectively described a group of refractory oAPS patients treated with low-dose glucocorticoids and conducted a meta-analysis, finding that glucocorticoids can increase the rate of successful pregnancy, but high-dose steroids can increase the rate of maternal and fetal morbidities.
Background Glucocorticoids have been suggested as a potential therapy in refractory obstetric antiphospholipid syndrome (oAPS). Our aims were to describe a cohort of patients with oAPS treated with low-dose glucocorticoids and to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis evaluating the effects of additional glucocorticoids on the pregnancy outcomes in oAPS patients. Methods Retrospective study that included 11 women diagnosed with primary antiphospholipid syndrome. The meta-analysis was conducted by fitting random effects models and was checked for heterogeneity. Results All women had suffered from early pregnancy losses and two also had a history of fetal deaths. We studied 47 pregnancies that resulted in 32 abortions (68.1%) and 3 fetal deaths (6.4%). Twenty-six pregnancies were under treatment, mainly LDA and LMWH. Low-dose glucocorticoids were indicated in 13 pregnancies (always in association with LDA and LMWH). There was a decrease in pregnancy loss in those patients treated with LDA and LMWH. Treatment with glucocorticoids significantly increased the rate of successful pregnancy (38.5% abortions in treated vs 85.3% abortions in non-treated pregnancies; p=0.003). After multivariate GEE analysis, only glucocorticoids remained inversely associated with pregnancy loss (OR=0.157, (CI 0.025-0.968, p=0.046)). The meta-analysis showed that glucocorticoids tended to improve the frequency of successful pregnancy (OR= 0.509 (0.252-1.028), p=0.06). Three cases of gestational diabetes and one of preeclampsia were observed in our cohort. The meta-analysis, which mostly included studies using high-dose steroids, showed that glucocorticoids increased not only the frequency of preeclampsia and gestational diabetes, but also the rate of pre-term birth. Conclusions The efficacy of low-dose glucocorticoids in addition to the standard therapy in patients with refractory oAPS should be confirmed in well-designed clinical trials. However, high doses of steroids significantly increase the frequency of maternal and fetal morbidities, making their use strongly inadvisable.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available