Rheumatoid Arthritis Clinical Trial
Official title:
PreConceptional Counselling in Active Rheumatoid Arthritis
The first objective of the study is to evaluate a treat to target treatment strategy in women with moderate to high disease activity of RA and a pregnancy wish, from pre-pregnancy. The treatment strategy is based on deliberate treatment decisions to lower disease activity, including the continuation or start of biological treatment (in particular anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor [anti-TNF]), based on a standard care protocol in the Erasmus MC. The second objective is to evaluate the safety of the use of anti-TNF during pregnancy among women with a rheumatic disease that require the use of anti-TNF before or during pregnancy.
Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) is an auto-inflammatory disease that particularly involves chronic
inflammation of the joints.The disease is in essence a systemically active one that can
affect almost any organ. Pregnancy can spontaneously reduce the activity of RA. This
phenomenon has been investigated in the PARA-study (Pregnancy-induced Amelioration of
Rheumatoid Arthritis study), a nationwide prospective cohort study initiated and coordinated
by the department of Rheumatology, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam the
Netherlands.
The PARA-study reconfirmed previous data that RA improved during pregnancy. However, it also
showed that this improvement was less pronounced than previously thought since > 50% of
RA-patients still had active disease during third trimester of pregnancy. It also
demonstrated that active RA was associated with lower birth weight and that children of
mothers with active RA demonstrated rapid catch up growth in weight. Lower birth weight as
well as rapid catch up growth in weight have been shown to be associated with a less
favorable cardiovascular profile in early adulthood. Finally, it showed that time to
pregnancy is prolonged in RA-patients with active disease. Also the use of prednisone > 7,5
mg daily or the use of NSAIDs (Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs) were associated with a
prolonged time to pregnancy. These latter associations were independent of disease activity.
The findings of the PARA-study implicate that one should strive for low disease activity in
women with RA and a pregnancy wish, but that in the meantime NSAIDs and doses of prednisone
exceeding 7.5 mg daily should be avoided. Since common drugs to treat RA, like methotrexate,
are incompatible with pregnancy, lowering disease activity in pregnant RA-patients or with a
pregnancy wish becomes a real challenge for the patient and the treating physician. This all
underscores the importance of new treatment modalities for RA-patients with a pregnancy
wish.
In the last decade new treatment options for RA, the so-called biologicals, became
available. During pregnancy the most experience has been gained with biologicals belonging
to the class of anti-TNF therapy. In the USA, anti-TNF has been approved for use during
pregnancy as a FDA (Food and Drug Administration) class B (i.e. Animal reproduction studies
fail to demonstrate a risk to the fetus, and adequate, but well-controlled, studies of
pregnant women have not been conducted). Registry studies show that anti-TNF use seems to be
safe during pregnancy in humans also. Furthermore, anti-TNF therapy has been used
intentionally preconceptionally to improve the chance of pregnancies in women with recurrent
spontaneous abortions. Since no randomized controlled trials can be done during pregnancy,
circumstantial evidence has led to decision making in daily practice. In case of high
disease activity use of anti-TNF to control disease activity outweighs the risk of potential
harm to the foetus.
Most anti-TNF medications are monoclonal antibodies of the IgG class. For that reason these
antibodies are, from around week 14 of gestation, actively transported across the placenta.
When used into third trimester of pregnancy, higher levels of these TNF-alpha antibodies are
reached in the fetal circulation compared to the maternal circulation, making the newborn
more prone for infections. Vaccination of newborns with live inactivated vaccines are
therefore contraindicated till anti-TNF alpha antibody levels are not detectable anymore. It
is often advised to stop anti-TNF in the first trimester of pregnancy. The rationale behind
this approach is that RA improves during pregnancy anyway and that it is safe to taper off
medication. In addition it is thought that with discontinuation of anti-TNFearly during
pregnancy no placental transfer of anti-TNF antibodies will take place. However, currently
no scientific evidence is available to support both assumptions.
An alternative approach is to prescribe Certolizumab during pregnancy or in women with a
pregnancy wish. Certolizumab is a pegylated antibody against TNF-alpha. Since it lacks an
Fc-tail it is not transported across the placenta and only trace amounts can be detected in
the newborn. In the Erasmus MC a protocol was recently developed to standardize care for
patients (already pregnant or with a pregnancy wish) that in theory might benefit from
treatment with anti-TNF therapy. This protocol is being evaluated in the Pre-CARA study.
The Pre-CARA study is a continuation of the previous PARA study, but focuses on RA patients
with high disease activity and a pregnancy wish. The first objective is to evaluate a treat
to target treatment strategy in women with moderate to high disease activity of RA and a
pregnancy wish, from pre-pregnancy till six months after delivery. The treatment strategy is
based on deliberate treatment decisions to lower disease activity, including the
continuation or start of biological treatment (anti-TNF), based on a standard care protocol
in the Erasmus MC. The second objective is to evaluate the safety of the use of anti-TNF
during in women with any chronic arthritide who require the use of this medication
preconceptionally and/or during pregnancy.
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