Abstract

Pregnancy planning is a relevant issue in the management of Multiple Sclerosis (MS), which commonly involves women of childbearing age. Increased knowledge and a wider therapeutic scenario could have changed the approach of neurologists towards this topic over time. Our aim was to describe how pregnancy planning and management for women with MS have changed in the last 15 years. We retrospectively collected clinical data of female patients with relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS), referred to the Neurology Clinic of the University-Hospital "Policlinico G. Rodolico" of Catania, who became pregnant between 2005-2020. We compared data about MS and pregnancy between two time periods according to pregnancy onset (2005-2012; 2013-2020). 190 patients with RRMS carried 253 pregnancies in the observation period. Women undergoing a pregnancy in the last period (2013-2020), as compared to women who had pregnancy in the first period (2005-2012), were older (p<0.01), more often treated before and during pregnancy with high-efficacy disease-modifying drugs (DMD) (p<0.001), and exhibited lower annualized relapse rates (ARR) before (p=0.01) and after pregnancy (p<0.001). Results from our experience suggest that nowadays DMD are more frequently used in women of childbearing age, even during pregnancy, leading to a reduced ARR before and after delivery in absence of increased obstetric complications.

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