The azathioprine-exposed group always had better scores than the unexposed group, Dr. Mahadevan said. Where it was statistically significant was for personal/social interaction at 24 months (50.75 vs. 47.34; P = .04), problem solving at 36 months (mean 52.04 vs. 48.66; P = .05), and problem solving at 48 months (mean 59.92 vs. 57.66; P = .02).
Dr. Mahadevan observed that the data may change because not all infants have reached each time point and may not reflect outcomes in lower socioeconomic groups since more than 90% of women were of similar socioeconomic and educational status.
Still, the findings are reassuring in the absence of any randomized controlled trials. A recent report found children born to mothers with IBD had higher rates of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and gross motor abnormalities (J. Crohns Colitis 2013;7:542-50), while a case series reported normal neuropsychological development in 25 consecutive children exposed in utero to TNF-alpha inhibitors (Inflamm. Bowel Dis. 2014;20:495-501), she noted.
A recent systematic review of 58 articles or abstracts also found no association between TNF-alpha inhibitor use during pregnancy with IBD and adverse pregnancy outcomes, congenital abnormalities, or infections in the first year of life (BMC Medicine 2013;11:174).
The study was supported by the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America. Dr. Mahadevan reported serving as an advisor for Janssen-Cilag, AbbVie, Takeda, and UCB Pharma, and receiving research grants from Prometheus Laboratories and GlaxoSmithKline.