Video

Expert gives tips on timing, managing lupus pregnancies


 

AT LUPUS 2019

– Not that many years ago, women with systemic lupus erythematosus were told not to get pregnant. It was just one more lupus heartbreak.

Times have changed, according to Lisa Sammaritano, MD, a lupus specialist and associate professor of clinical medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College, New York.

While lupus certainly complicates pregnancy, it by no means rules it out these days. With careful management, the dream of motherhood can become a reality for many women. Dr. Sammaritano shared her insights about timing and treatment at an international congress on systemic lupus erythematosus.

It’s important that the disease is under control as much as possible; that means that timing – and contraception – are key. Antiphospholipid antibodies, common in lupus, complicate matters, but there are workarounds, she said.

Recommended Reading

List of medications linked to drug-induced lupus expands
Clinician Reviews
Vagus nerve stimulation for rheumatology? Maybe
Clinician Reviews
Myositis mimics: Clues for making the right diagnosis
Clinician Reviews
BTK inhibitor calms pemphigus vulgaris with low-dose steroids
Clinician Reviews
Resistant hypertension hits SLE patients hard
Clinician Reviews
Socioeconomic status affects scleroderma severity in African Americans
Clinician Reviews
FDA panel calls for changes to breast implant rupture screening
Clinician Reviews
Rituximab does not improve fatigue symptoms of ME/CFS
Clinician Reviews
Powerful breast-implant testimony constrained by limited evidence
Clinician Reviews
Bronchiolitis is a feared complication of connective tissue disease
Clinician Reviews