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Post-neonatal Outcomes of Infants Born to Women with Active Trimester One Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Pilot Study

Authors :
Richard Y. Wu
Parul Tandon
Lindsy Ambrosio
Garett Dunsmore
Naomi Hotte
Levinus A. Dieleman
Shokrollah Elahi
Karen Madsen
Vivian Huang
Source :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences. 67:5177-5186
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD) are chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) that affect women in their childbearing years. Early pregnancy flare-up negatively impacts obstetrical and perinatal outcomes, but the impact on infants is unclear.To determine whether active IBD disease activity is associated with adverse post-neonatal outcomes post-partum.This is a single-center cohort study of women with IBD who underwent serial monitoring of post-neonatal outcomes post-partum. Infant outcomes were collected via self-filled questionnaires, including perinatal outcomes, APGAR scores, infant weights, heights, feeding habits and comorbidities within the first year of life.There was a total of 98 women with IBD and 78 live births throughout the study: 50 women were enrolled during trimester one alone and 49 were included into the current study. Among the 49 analyzed, 32 were in remission and 17 were in relapse during trimester one. Trimester one disease activity was associated with more adverse obstetrical outcomes including emergency C-sections and reduced 1-min APGAR scores. At follow-up, infants born to women with T1-flare had reduced weight-for-age Z scores and length-for-age Z scores up to 6 months of age.Active IBD during trimester one is correlated with adverse post-neonatal outcomes, particularly decreased infant weight and height up to 6 months of age. This suggests disease control in first trimester is essential for optimizing infant growth and post-neonatal outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
15732568 and 01632116
Volume :
67
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digestive Diseases and Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....73b215bb812d7e935e04abdf1ac3e9cf
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10620-022-07430-x