医学
怀孕
最佳实践
人口
家庭医学
医疗保健
梅德林
疾病
炎症性肠病
环境卫生
病理
政治学
遗传学
生物
法学
作者
Uma Mahadevan,Cynthia H. Seow,Edward L. Barnes,María Chaparro,Emma Flanagan,Sonia Friedman,Mette Julsgaard,Sunanda Kane,Siew C. Ng,Joana Torres,Gillian Watermeyer,Jesús K. Yamamoto‐Furusho,Christopher Robinson,Susan Fisher,Phil Anderson,Richard B. Gearry,Dana Duricova,Marla Dubinsky,Millie D. Long
出处
期刊:Gut
[BMJ]
日期:2025-08-28
卷期号:: gutjnl-336402
标识
DOI:10.1136/gutjnl-2025-336402
摘要
Pregnancy can be a complex and risk filled event for women with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). High-quality studies in this population are lacking, with limited data on medications approved to treat IBD during pregnancy. For patients, limited knowledge surrounding pregnancy impacts pregnancy rates, medication adherence, and outcomes. Limited provider knowledge leads to highly varied practices in care affected by local dogma, available resources, individual interpretation of the literature, and fear of harming the fetus. The variations in guidelines by different societies and countries reflect this and lead to confusion for physicians and patients alike. The Global Consensus Consortium is a group of 39 IBD and content experts and 7 patient advocates from 6 continents who convened to review and assess current data and come to an agreement on best practices based on these data. The GRADE process was used when sufficient published data were available and the RAND process in those instances where expert opinion was needed to guide consistent practice. Recommendations were informed by the guiding principle that maternal health best supports infant health. The topics were divided into ten categories with 34 GRADE recommendations and 35 Consensus statements. Overall, the goal of the group was to provide data-driven and practical guidance to improve the care of women with IBD around the globe based on the best available research.
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