Pregnancy outcomes from the global pharmacovigilance database on interferon beta-1b exposure

Background: The goal of the present cohort study was to review outcomes of patients exposed to interferon beta-1b during pregnancy. Methods: Pregnancy cases with exposure to interferon beta-1b reported to Bayer’s pharmacovigilance (PV) database from worldwide sources from January 1995 through Februa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kerstin Hellwig, Fernando Duarte Caron, Eva-Maria Wicklein, Aasia Bhatti, Alessandra Adamo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-03-01
Series:Therapeutic Advances in Neurological Disorders
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1756286420910310
id doaj-1605d1889be243929c68ddb0ee341206
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1605d1889be243929c68ddb0ee3412062020-11-25T03:13:28ZengSAGE PublishingTherapeutic Advances in Neurological Disorders1756-28642020-03-011310.1177/1756286420910310Pregnancy outcomes from the global pharmacovigilance database on interferon beta-1b exposureKerstin HellwigFernando Duarte CaronEva-Maria WickleinAasia BhattiAlessandra AdamoBackground: The goal of the present cohort study was to review outcomes of patients exposed to interferon beta-1b during pregnancy. Methods: Pregnancy cases with exposure to interferon beta-1b reported to Bayer’s pharmacovigilance (PV) database from worldwide sources from January 1995 through February 2018 were retrieved for evaluation. Only cases where pregnancy outcomes were unknown at the time of reporting (i.e. prospective cases) were included in the analysis of this retrospective cohort study. Results: As of February 2018, 2581 prospective pregnancies exposed to interferon beta-1b were retrieved from the database; 1348 pregnancies had documented outcomes. The majority of outcomes [1106 cases (82.0%)] were live births. Health status was known for 981 live births (no known health status for 125). Most of the prospective pregnancies with known outcomes corresponded to live births with no congenital anomalies [896 cases (91.3%)]. Spontaneous abortion occurred in 160 cases (11.9%). Congenital birth defects were observed in 14/981 live births with known health status [1.4%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.78–2.38]. No consistent pattern in the type of birth defect was identified. Rates of both spontaneous abortion and birth defects were not higher than the general population. Conclusions: These PV data, the largest sample of interferon beta-1b-exposed patients reported to date, suggest no increase in risk of spontaneous abortion or congenital anomalies in women exposed during pregnancy.https://doi.org/10.1177/1756286420910310
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kerstin Hellwig
Fernando Duarte Caron
Eva-Maria Wicklein
Aasia Bhatti
Alessandra Adamo
spellingShingle Kerstin Hellwig
Fernando Duarte Caron
Eva-Maria Wicklein
Aasia Bhatti
Alessandra Adamo
Pregnancy outcomes from the global pharmacovigilance database on interferon beta-1b exposure
Therapeutic Advances in Neurological Disorders
author_facet Kerstin Hellwig
Fernando Duarte Caron
Eva-Maria Wicklein
Aasia Bhatti
Alessandra Adamo
author_sort Kerstin Hellwig
title Pregnancy outcomes from the global pharmacovigilance database on interferon beta-1b exposure
title_short Pregnancy outcomes from the global pharmacovigilance database on interferon beta-1b exposure
title_full Pregnancy outcomes from the global pharmacovigilance database on interferon beta-1b exposure
title_fullStr Pregnancy outcomes from the global pharmacovigilance database on interferon beta-1b exposure
title_full_unstemmed Pregnancy outcomes from the global pharmacovigilance database on interferon beta-1b exposure
title_sort pregnancy outcomes from the global pharmacovigilance database on interferon beta-1b exposure
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Therapeutic Advances in Neurological Disorders
issn 1756-2864
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Background: The goal of the present cohort study was to review outcomes of patients exposed to interferon beta-1b during pregnancy. Methods: Pregnancy cases with exposure to interferon beta-1b reported to Bayer’s pharmacovigilance (PV) database from worldwide sources from January 1995 through February 2018 were retrieved for evaluation. Only cases where pregnancy outcomes were unknown at the time of reporting (i.e. prospective cases) were included in the analysis of this retrospective cohort study. Results: As of February 2018, 2581 prospective pregnancies exposed to interferon beta-1b were retrieved from the database; 1348 pregnancies had documented outcomes. The majority of outcomes [1106 cases (82.0%)] were live births. Health status was known for 981 live births (no known health status for 125). Most of the prospective pregnancies with known outcomes corresponded to live births with no congenital anomalies [896 cases (91.3%)]. Spontaneous abortion occurred in 160 cases (11.9%). Congenital birth defects were observed in 14/981 live births with known health status [1.4%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.78–2.38]. No consistent pattern in the type of birth defect was identified. Rates of both spontaneous abortion and birth defects were not higher than the general population. Conclusions: These PV data, the largest sample of interferon beta-1b-exposed patients reported to date, suggest no increase in risk of spontaneous abortion or congenital anomalies in women exposed during pregnancy.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1756286420910310
work_keys_str_mv AT kerstinhellwig pregnancyoutcomesfromtheglobalpharmacovigilancedatabaseoninterferonbeta1bexposure
AT fernandoduartecaron pregnancyoutcomesfromtheglobalpharmacovigilancedatabaseoninterferonbeta1bexposure
AT evamariawicklein pregnancyoutcomesfromtheglobalpharmacovigilancedatabaseoninterferonbeta1bexposure
AT aasiabhatti pregnancyoutcomesfromtheglobalpharmacovigilancedatabaseoninterferonbeta1bexposure
AT alessandraadamo pregnancyoutcomesfromtheglobalpharmacovigilancedatabaseoninterferonbeta1bexposure
_version_ 1724646637455802368