Abstract

Leflunomide is contraindicated during pregnancy and treatment cessation is recommended two years before pregnancy. We aimed to describe leflunomide use in women of childbearing age in Germany, the occurrence of pregnancies in women using leflunomide and malformations among children possibly exposed in utero. Using the GePaRD database (claims data, ∼20% of the German population), we determined annual age-standardized prevalences of leflunomide use between 2004 and 2019 among females aged 13–49 years. Further, we estimated the number of exposed pregnancies by assessing whether the exposure window assigned to the last dispensation before pregnancy (days covered by the dispensation plus two years) overlapped the onset of pregnancy or whether there was a dispensation in the first eight weeks of pregnancy. For exposed live births, a mother-baby linkage was performed and the presence of congenital malformation was assessed. The age-standardized prevalence of leflunomide use ranged between 0.34 and 0.46 per 1000 females during the study period. About one third of the users were ≤40 years. We identified 205 leflunomide-exposed pregnancies ending during the study period. 71% of these pregnancies ended in a live birth (26% preterm) and 10% in an induced abortion. In 86% of the live births (n=125) the mother-baby linkage was successful. Among these 125 children, 13 children (10%) had congenital malformations. In conclusion, we observed a considerable number of pregnancies in women using leflunomide in the two years before or during early pregnancy. This highlights the importance of monitoring the implementation of existing risk minimization measures for leflunomide in Germany.

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