5 research outputs found
Associations between antenatal prednisone exposure and long-term cortisol and cortisone concentrations in children born to women with rheumatoid arthritis: results from a nationwide prospective cohort study
Objectives To identify whether children with antenatal
prednisone exposure have chronically elevated cortisol
and cortisone concentrations, an altered body composition
or higher blood pressure. In addition, to identify whether
maternal rheumatoid arthritis disease (RA) activity is
associated with these alterations.
Methods In this prospective study, 56 children (mean
age=10.0 years) with and 61 children (mean age=9.6 years)
without antenatal prednisone exposure, born to women with
RA, were included. Hair cortisol and cortisone were analysed
using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry.
Linear regression models were built to analyse differences
between the two groups, corrected for relevant covariates.
Hair cortisol concentrations were also compared between
the study population and an age-matched healthy reference
group(n=150 children, mean age=9.8 years).
Results Hair cortisol and cortisone concentrations were
similar in children with and without antenatal predniso
Altered DNA methylation in children born to mothers with rheumatoid arthritis during pregnancy
Objectives The main objective of this study was to
determine whether the DNA methylation profile of
children born to mothers with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is
different from that of children born to mothers from the
general population. In addition, we aimed to determine
whether any differences in methylation are associated
with maternal RA disease activity or medication use
during pregnancy.
Methods For this study, genome-wide DNA
methylation was measured at cytosine-phosphateguanine (CpG) sites, using the Infinium Illumina
HumanMethylation 450K BeadChip, in 80 blood samples
from children (mean age=6.8 years) born to mothers
with RA. As controls, blood samples from 354 children
(mean age=6.0 years) from the population-based
Generation R Study were used. Linear mixed models
were performed to investigate differential methylation
between the groups, corrected for relevant confounders.
Results A total of 147 CpGs were differentially
methylated between blood samples of children born
to mothers with RA and the control blood samples.
The five most significantly associated CpGs were
cg06642177, cg08867893, cg06778273, cg07786668
and cg20116574. The differences in methylation were
not associated with maternal RA disease activity or
medication use during pregnancy.
Conclusions DNA methylation at 147 CpGs differed
between children born to mothers with RA and children
born to mothers from the general population. It remains
unknown whether the identified associations are causal,
and if so whether they are caused by the disease or
treatment. More research, including replication of these
results, is necessary in order to strengthen the relevance
of our findings for the later-life health of children born to
mothers with R
Pregnancy and rheumatoid arthritis
Fertility is impaired in female patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), which is related to disease activity and the use of certain medication. During pregnancy, disease activity usually improves, but less than previously thought Especially in women with high disease activity, the pregnancy outcome is also impaired. All of this underscores the importance of strict control of disease activity in RA patients who wish to conceive. Management of RA disease activity during pregnancy might be a challenge as the treatment options are limited. Evidence is accumulating that tumor necrosis factor (TNF) blockers can be safely used during pregnancy, particularly during the first trimester and the beginning of the second trimester. Far less is known about the problems faced by male RA patients who wish to conceive, in terms of not only fertility and pregnancy outcome but also the safety of medication. In this paper, the fertility issues in patients with RA, the pregnancy-associated improvement of RA, the pregnancy outcomes, including the long-term effects on the offspring, and treatment options, including those during lactation and for male patients wishing to conceive, will be reviewed. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Identifying Clinical Factors Associated With Low Disease Activity and Remission of Rheumatoid Arthritis During Pregnancy
Objective: To identify a combination of clinical factors associated with low disease activity and remission in the third trimester during pregnancy in women with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods: This study is embedded in the Pregnancy-Induced Amelioration of Rheumatoid Arthritis study, a prospective cohort study. There were data available on 190 pregnancies from first trimester until delivery. Multivariate regression analyses were performed on the disease activity (Disease Activity Score in 28 joints [DAS28] using the C-reactive protein [CRP] level) in the third trimester. Independent covariates were the DAS28-CRP-3 in first trimester, prednisone and sulfasalazine use in the first trimester, parity, methotrexate use in the past, autoantibody status, the presence of erosions, and RA disease duration. Results: In multivariate regression models, the DAS28-CRP-3, use of prednisone in the first trimester, and the presence of autoantibodies were negatively associated with low disease activity (DAS28-CRP-3 <3.2) in the third trimester (P<0.05), and the DAS28-CRP-3 and presence of autoantibodies were also associated with remission (DAS28-CRP-3 <2.6) (P<0.001). Subgroup analysis revealed that the associations of prednisone use and presence of autoantibodies were only present in patients with moderate-to-high disease activity (DAS28-CRP-3 ≥3.2) in the first trimester. Conclusion: RA patients who have a low DAS28-CRP-3 in the first trimester (irrespective of autoantibody stat