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Data collected through the registry may be used to address a range of research questions and objectives, including but not limited to the following:
Research question: Is there an increased risk of adverse maternal, fetal, or infant outcomes among individuals who are exposed to Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) treatments during pregnancy?
The primary objective of the registry is to estimate the prevalence of major congenital malformations among pregnant individuals with IBD who are exposed to an IBD pharmacotherapy during pregnancy.
The secondary objectives of the registry are:
To estimate the prevalence of other maternal, fetal, and infant outcomes among pregnant individuals with IBD who are exposed to IBD pharmacotherapies during pregnancy.
To contextualize the prevalence of outcomes among pregnant individuals who are exposed to IBD pharmacotherapies during pregnancy and estimate the prevalence of all outcomes of interest among pregnant individuals with IBD who are not exposed to any IBD pharmacotherapies or an IBD pharmacotherapy of interest during pregnancy.
If sample size permits, to estimate the risk ratio for each outcome, comparing the outcomes of pregnant individuals with IBD who are exposed to IBD pharmacotherapy with those who are not exposed to any IBD pharmacotherapies or an IBD pharmacotherapy of interest during pregnancy.
Data collection may be used to determine pharmacotherapy-specific use with or without unexposed cohorts on an as-needed basis, as sample size allows.
Full description
Rationale and Background:
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a group of chronic inflammatory conditions that affect the gastrointestinal tract and can be divided into two main types: Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). Half of the people diagnosed with IBD received their diagnosis before the age of 35 years, which coincides with the peak reproductive years for women. Studies have shown that IBD is associated with increased risk of adverse pregnancy and fetal outcomes, including preterm birth, stillbirth, and low birth weight. The CorEvitas IBD Pregnancy Registry (IBD-PR) aims to collect real-world evidence on the safety of IBD pharmacotherapies during pregnancy and the first year of infant life and provide valuable insights into the risks and safety profiles of IBD medications, enabling healthcare professionals to make more informed decisions when managing IBD in pregnant individuals.
Research Question and Objectives: Data collected through the registry may be used to address a range of research questions and objectives, including but not limited to the following:
The research question is: Is there an increased risk of adverse maternal, fetal, or infant outcomes among individuals who are exposed to IBD pharmacotherapies during pregnancy?
The primary objective of the registry is to estimate the prevalence of major congenital malformations (MCM) among pregnant individuals with IBD who are exposed to an IBD pharmacotherapy during pregnancy.
The secondary objectives of the registry are:
To estimate the prevalence of other maternal, fetal, and infant outcomes among pregnant individuals with IBD who are exposed to an IBD pharmacotherapy during pregnancy
To contextualize the prevalence of outcomes among pregnant individuals who are exposed to IBD pharmacotherapies during pregnancy and estimate the prevalence of all outcomes of interest among pregnant individuals with IBD who are not exposed to an IBD pharmacotherapy during pregnancy
If sample size permits, to estimate the risk ratio for each outcome, comparing the outcomes of pregnant individuals with IBD who are exposed to an IBD pharmacotherapy with outcomes of those who are not exposed to an IBD pharmacotherapy
Data collection may be used to determine pharmacotherapy-specific use with or without unexposed cohorts on an as-needed basis, as sample size allows.
Study Design: This prospective, observational cohort study is designed to estimate the prevalence of maternal, fetal, and infant outcomes among individuals with IBD who are exposed to an IBD pharmacotherapy during pregnancy. For this registry, the index date will be the date of first exposure to the IBD pharmacotherapy for the exposed cohort and the date of enrollment for the unexposed cohort. The risks of pregnancy-related outcomes, maternal outcomes, and neonatal/infant outcomes will be estimated for participants with IBD exposed and unexposed to any IBD pharmacotherapies or an IBD pharmacotherapy of interest during pregnancy.
Population: The registry population will include two cohorts of pregnant individuals: one cohort of individuals with a diagnosis of IBD who are exposed to an IBD pharmacotherapy during pregnancy and one cohort of individuals with a diagnosis of IBD who are not exposed to IBD pharmacotherapies during pregnancy.
Variables: Individuals will be considered exposed during pregnancy if at least one dose of an IBD treatment is taken during pregnancy or up to at least five times the product's half-life before conception. The primary outcome of interest is MCMs. The maternal and pregnancy secondary outcomes include minor congenital malformations, preeclampsia, eclampsia, spontaneous abortion, stillbirth, pregnancy termination, preterm birth, small for gestational age, gestational diabetes, pregnancy-induced hypertension, and placental abruption. The infant secondary outcomes during the first year of life include postnatal growth deficiency, infant developmental delay, infant hospitalization, infant infections (both serious and nonserious), and infant death. Covariates will include demographics, risk factors for the outcomes, comorbidities, concomitant medications, and predictors of treatment with an approved IBD pharmacotherapy.
Data Source: This registry will collect data from participants and healthcare providers involved in their care or the care of their infants via concise data collection forms at predefined timepoints during pregnancy, at pregnancy outcome, and up to 1 year of infant age.
Study Size: The registry aims to include as many pregnant individuals as possible, with no defined upper limit on enrollment in each cohort, to estimate the prevalence of the primary outcome, MCM, with meaningful confidence and precision. This approach aims to achieve adequate sample size to address additional research questions of interest, and/or maintain generalizability and representativeness of the registry population. Assuming a prevalence of MCM equivalent to 3% in each cohort, 1,143 and 303 live births in the analysis population of each cohort are needed to estimate the prevalence of MCM with ±1% and 2% precision, respectively.
Data Analysis: Participant characteristics will be summarized with descriptive statistics for each cohort. Comparative analyses will be conducted for each outcome if sample size permits. Supplementary analyses will be conducted that include pregnant individuals who were excluded from the analysis population. If sample size permits, subgroup and sensitivity analyses will be performed to examine the extent to which changes in certain methods or assumptions affect the results.
Milestones: The IBD-PR is expected to launch in March 2025, and the end of data collection is planned for 30 September 2032.
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Inclusion criteria
Exposed and unexposed cohort:
Exposed cohort only:
Exclusion criteria
Exposed and unexposed cohort:
832 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Ronna L Chan, PhD, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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