Abstract

Abstract Background/Aims For ideal pregnancy outcomes, patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease require targeted disease control with pregnancy compatible medications. A proactive approach is required given that people often won’t disclose plans for a pregnancy with healthcare professionals unless directly asked, and 45% of UK pregnancies are unplanned. The BSR 2022 guidelines on prescribing drugs in pregnancy and breastfeeding makes various recommendations on pre-pregnancy counselling for people with rheumatic disease with referral to specialists with relevant expertise as appropriate. Therefore, we used the linked BSR audit tool to evaluate documentation of pre-pregnancy counselling in rheumatology clinics lacking obstetric input at our hospital. Methods Inclusion criteria were all females, aged 15-45 years, attending a doctor-led Rheumatology clinic without obstetric input between 24/4/23 - 30/4/23 at University College London Hospital. Exclusion criteria were infertility and those seen as one-off clinic appointments and not commenced on medications. Clinic notes from all Rheumatology reviews over the preceding one year were assessed using the audit tool in the 2022 BSR pregnancy guidelines. People currently pregnant were audited for the year prior to the date of conception of their pregnancy. Results Among 50 clinics reviewed, 42 female subjects were eligible across 19 clinics, 64% of whom were aged 36-45 years and 36% were aged 21-35 years. Six subjects were pregnant. Diagnoses included: 24% systemic lupus erythematosus; 19.5% rheumatoid arthritis; 17% seronegative axial spondyloarthropathy; and the remaining 39% consisted of fibromyalgia, hypermobility, and other inflammatory arthritidies. 70% of people were screened for antibodies that could adversely impact pregnancy (i.e. anti-Ro or anti-phospholipid). Only 26% of subjects had documentation of being asked if they wished to conceive. In subjects who did not express a wish to conceive, only 21% were asked if they were using contraception. A total of 17% of the 42 subjects were referred to a specialist Obstetric-Rheumatology clinic for pre-pregnancy counselling during the study period. Of 35 subjects taking medications, only 22.8% had documentation of appropriate pre-pregnancy drug counselling within the last year. Of patients without documented pre-pregnancy advice, 46% were taking medications considered unsafe in pregnancy. Furthermore, no patients were signposted to sources of further information on drug therapy and/or rheumatic disease in pregnancy. Conclusion This audit highlights a lack of regular documented discussions around family planning and medication counselling in female subjects of childbearing age attending rheumatology clinics lacking obstetric input. Regular discussions are important for those who do and don’t wish to conceive, to appropriately counsel regarding pre-pregnancy measures or contraception. This audit using the BSR audit tool will be used as the baseline for a quality improvement project to support colleagues in providing regular, accurate reproductive health advice, supported by trusted online resources and referral to a specialist obstetric-rheumatology service as required. Disclosure A. Shirazi: None. B. Goulden: Grants/research support; Undertaking a PhD supported by Versus Arthritis (ref. 22975). I. Giles: Grants/research support; IG has received an unrestricted research grant, travel and speaker fees from UCB Pharma.

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