Challenges in Management of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
on Pregnancy: A Single Case Report
Maya Oktari Yolanda
1*
, Kristo A. Nababan
1
1
Department of Dermatology & Venereology,
Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sumatera Utara Hospital,
Adam Malik Hospital, Medan
*Corresponding author
Keyword: Systemic lupus erythematosus; disease activity; pregnancy
Abstract: Introduction: Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease with unknown etiology.
Pregnancy can trigger a recurrence of the disease or aggravate symptoms and threaten the lives of the
mother and/or the baby whom she carries. Case: A pregnant woman who is 18 years old, complained
thicked crust on the erythematous plaques distributed in the malar region, nasal, supraorbital and auricular
sinistra et dextra region, discontinuous hair marks on the lateral side of the scalp, mild arthritis. Laboratory
test results are leukocytosis (leukocyte 15,000 cells/µl; neutrophil 7.9 cells/µ; lymphocyte 6.29 cells/µ;
monocyte 0.74 cells/µ), CRP 0.7 mg/dl; C3 50mg/dl, ANA Test 2.4; Anti-dsDNA 28. The result of kidney
function tests is in the normal range. The USG results of a fetus: pregnancy in the uterus (8-9 weeks), child
alive (31/01/2019). This patient has been diagnosed as SLE for three years but is well controlled with
medication. However, the recurrence occurred when she is pregnant. This patient was diagnosed as mild
SLE in pregnancy, and the recurrence was assessed using the Lupus Activity Index in Pregnancy (LAI-P)
scale, and the score was 0.43. Then she was given the treatment with methylprednisolone 4mg once daily,
ranitidine 150mg two times daily, paracetamol 500mg three times daily, folic acid 400mg once daily, B-
complex vitamin two times daily, desoximetasone 0.25% cream on the face, sunscreen, and also she was
suggested to do a pregnancy control. In addition, she was also given education about her diseases, to avoid
direct sun exposure, drug side effects, psychological problems, how to deal with stress and keep a healthy
diet and lifestyle. Conclusion: Pregnancy can trigger the recurrence of SLE or aggravate the symptom so
that it can increase maternal and fetal mortality and morbidity. The treatment needs a multidisciplinary
approach together with Internal medicine (Rheumatology) and Obstetrics department, close monitoring to
check if there is a change in clinical manifestation, vital signs, liver function test, kidney function test,
hematology test, and also monitoring fetal development.
1 INTRODUCTION
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic
autoimmune inflammatory disease with unknown
etiology and various clinical manifestations, disease
pathways, and prognosis. Genetic and hormonal
factors play a role in its pathophysiology. The
annual incidence of SLE in the United States reaches
5.1 per 100,000 population. The clinical
manifestations of SLE are extensive, including the
involvement of the skin and mucosa, joints, blood,
heart, lungs, kidneys, central nervous system (CNS)
and immune system. With frequent symptoms of
arthritis at 48.1%, malar rash 31.1%, nephropathy
27.9%, photosensitivity 22.9%, neurologic
involvement 19.4%, and fever 16.6% while clinical
manifestations that are rarely found are myositis
4.3%, discoid rash 7.8%, 4.8% hemolytic anemia,
and acute subcutaneous lesions 6.7%.
SLE mainly occurs in women of childbearing
age, and there is an acceleration regarding the role of
pregnancy which can aggravate the symptoms of
SLE by 2-3 times, and also appear between 35%-
70% of all pregnancies. This is linked to hormonal
changes that induce physiological and
immunological changes (Th2 in an autoimmune
response). The risk of flares increases dramatically if
the patient has active lupus for six months before
Yolanda, M. and Nababan, K.
Challenges in Management of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus on Pregnancy: A Single Case Report.
DOI: 10.5220/0009990404110415
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (ICTROMI 2019), pages 411-415
ISBN: 978-989-758-469-5
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
411
pregnancy are 7.5 times. The most common SLE
activity is mild to moderate form. The symptoms are
often a rash on the skin, arthritis, and hematological
changes.
Symptoms of flares can appear at any time or
several months after birth. Monitoring is needed
during pregnancy and postpartum. The impact of
SLE on pregnancy is abortion or fetal death.
Essential factors that play a role are flares, the
timing of flares and antiphospholipid syndrome
(APS). In addition, preterm and low birth weight
(LBW) can occur in 9.4% of cases due to thrombosis
in the placenta. The increase in preeclampsia
incidence occurred in the range of 13-35%.
Nephritis also increased the incidence of abortion,
36-52%, and preterm labor 35-40%. However,
physiological changes related to pregnancy can also
resemble those of SLE, such as fatigue, arthralgia,
hair loss, headache, facial and palm erythema,
anemia, thrombocytopenia. An assessment of SLE
activity in pregnancy can use a more specific scale
of the SLE Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI), as
well as Lupus Activity Index in Pregnancy (LAI-P)
scale.
Treatment of SLE in pregnancy, mild SLE
activity can use low-dose prednisone (<7.5mg/day),
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory (NSAID) can be
used at the end of the first trimester, and second
trimester. Hydrocloroquin (HCQ) has a protective
effect, antithrombosis, ability to have a longer life,
and minimal side effects. SLE moderate activity can
be treated with high-dose or pulse-doses
corticosteroid, intravenous immunoglobulin to
control the kidney and hematology organ function.
Immunosuppressant agents such as cyclosporine,
tacrolimus, azathioprine are contraindicated.
Morbidity and mortality in SLE are still quite high,
with a survival rate of 5-10 years is 84-95%, and 10-
15 years is 70-85%.
2 CASE
An 18-year-old pregnant woman from Deli Serdang
came to the Department of Dermatology and
Venereology of the Adam Malik Hospital in Medan
on 19
th
March 2019, with the chief complaint is
thickened and painful malar rash from the facial
area, extended to cheeks, nose, and eyebrow since
two months ago. She also complained that her face
would feel hot and red when exposed to sunlight.
This is accompanied by hair loss, oral thrush, fever,
and weakness. The patient was referred to the
rheumatology department because of the pain in her
joints.
Three years ago, the patient complained about
the malar rash on her face when exposed to the
sunlight, and she also felt the burning sensation in
her face. The patient also experienced oral thrush,
hair loss, and painful leg joint until she was unable
to walk. In addition, patients feel quickly tired,
decreased appetite, and high fever. Then she went to
Melati Hospital in Pakam and was referred to the
Pirngadi Hospital. Patients were diagnosed as lupus.
The patient was hospitalized, and complaints have
improved. All this time, she is routinely controlled
in Melati Hospital and was administered
methylprednisolone in maintenance dose, ranitidine,
and sunscreen. In December 2018, the patient was
found to be pregnant, and they complained slightly
reappeared.
In physical examination, we found that the
patient appeared to be mildly ill. Vital signs within
normal limits. In dermatology examination, we
found an erythematous plaque in the malar region
with thickened crust, extended to nasal bridge,
supraorbital and auricular sinistra et dextra regions.
We also found a discontinuous hair mark on the
temporal region and erythematous linear striae in the
abdominal and antebrachial regions. Laboratory test
results are leukocytosis (leukocyte 15.000 cells/µl;
neutrophil 7.9 cells/µ; lymphocyte 6.29 cells/µ;
monocyte 0.74 cells/µ), ferritin levels 372,50 ng/ml,
CRP 0.7mg/dl; C3 50mg/dl, ANA Test 2.4; Anti-
dsDNA 28. Kidney function tests are in the normal
range. USG of the fetus results in pregnancy in the
uterus (8-9 weeks), child alive (31/01/2019).
The patient was diagnosed as a mild degree of
SLE in pregnancy and was given therapy
methylprednisolone 4mg once daily, ranitidine
150mg twice daily, paracetamol 500mg three times
daily, folic acid 400mg once daily, B-complex
vitamin two times daily, desoximetasone 0.25%
cream on the face, sunscreen, and also she was
suggested to do a pregnancy control. In addition, she
was also given education about her diseases, to
avoid direct sun exposure, drug side effects,
psychological problems, how to deal with stress and
keep a healthy diet and lifestyle.
ICTROMI 2019 - The 2nd International Conference on Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
412
Picture 1. Dermatology examination found (A) erythematous plaque in the malar region with thickened crust, extended to
nasal bridge, supraorbital and (B, C) auricular sinistra et dextra regions. We also found (C) a discontinuous hair mark on the
temporal region, and erythematous linear striae (D) in the abdominal and (E) antebrachial region.
3 DISCUSSION
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) is a chronic
autoimmune inflammatory disease with unknown
etiology and various clinical manifestations, and
often did not recognize by medical personnel and
treatment is only in accordance with dominant
manifestation.
In our case, this patient was diagnosed with SLE
3 years ago, by using the criteria of the American
College of Rheumatology (ACR) with the discovery
of 4 or more criteria having a sensitivity of 85% and
a specificity of 95% in Pirngadi Hospital. She was
hospitalized in Pirngadi and had an improvement.
All this time, she was routinely controlled in Melati
Hospital and was administered methylprednisolone
A
B
C
D
E
Challenges in Management of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus on Pregnancy: A Single Case Report
413
in maintenance dose, ranitidine, and sunscreen. She
admits that there was no history of recurrence.
In December 2018, the patient was found to be
pregnant, and the complained slightly reappeared but
in the mild form. The current diagnosis is mild grade
SLE with skin lesion manifestations (malar rash),
mild arthritis, no life-threatening symptoms, and
stable organ function according to average results of
laboratory tests. She was assessed by LAI-P scale to
measure the incidence of flares caused by
pregnancy, comparing the previous symptoms and
the new symptoms. The value of this score is 0.43,
which can be concluded that this flare is caused by
pregnancy (with a minimum positive score LAI-P is
0.25).
Pregnancy does carry a separate problem for
SLE patients. Pregnancy not only increase the
incidence of recurrence or aggravate the symptoms
of SLE but also associated with a higher risk of
complications of the mother and her baby. A large
national database study of 16.7 million deliveries
reported many folds increased risk of maternal
death, pre-eclampsia, preterm labor, thrombosis,
infection, and hematologic complications during
SLE pregnancy. The biggest issue is the 3-5 times
higher risk of pre-eclampsia, complicating 16-30%
of SLE pregnancies. The predisposing factors for
pre-eclampsia include advanced maternal age,
previous personal or family history of pre-eclampsia,
pre-existing hypertension or diabetes mellitus, and
obesity. It is recommended at least six months of
controlled disease activity or in a state of total
remission. In lupus nephritis, the period is more
extended to 12 months in total remission. This can
reduce SLE recurrences during pregnancy. Our
patient claimed that she has been in controlled
activity disease in the last two years, but the
symptoms reappeared gradually since she was found
to be pregnant.
Patients were given methylprednisolone 4mg
once daily according to the Indonesian Rheumatic
Study Guide. Steroid exposure should be limited to a
minimum during the pregnancy because the high
doses are associated with an increased risk of
diabetes, hypertension, pre-eclampsia, and
premature rupture of membranes. However, in the
case of disease flares, short courses of high doses
and/or intravenous pulse methylprednisolone can be
used. Corticosteroid doses do not exceed 7.5 mg/day
of prednisone or equivalent, because 88% of
prednisone is deactivated by placental enzymes, and
<10% reaches fetal circulation. It is said that
methylprednisolone is safer than
beta/dexamethasone, but the risk of miscarriage is
increased by 21%. Our patient was also given
ranitidine to minimize gastrointestinal side effects of
methylprednisolone, paracetamol to relieve the pain,
folic acid to prevent the neural tube defect and
vitamin B-complex from fulfilling the patient’s need
of vitamin. Topical desoximetasone, 0.25% cream,
applied twice daily for her cutaneous lesions and
sunscreen to avoid the sunlight were also
administered.
Ante-natal management of pregnant patients with
SLE requires close monitoring together with Internal
medicine (Rheumatology) and Obstetrics
Department. The monitoring should be more
frequent and detailed than the usual standard of care.
Each visite should include thorough physical
examination, routine laboratory tests, and specific
investigations. Our patient was given the education
to do routine laboratory tests include kidney function
test, liver function test, serological tests, disease
activity (CRP, anti-ds-DNA, antibodies,
complement), and urine protein. Monitoring of fetus
should be done every month from 16-28 weeks,
every two weeks from 28-34 weeks, and every week
for the next gestational age. In addition, blood sugar
control with HbA1c and oral glucose tolerance test
are also needed. Education about the nature of the
diseases and avoiding the precipitating factors (sun
exposure, stress), drug side effects, psychological
problems, and maintaining a healthy lifestyle and
diet are also essential things
It is vital to monitor fetal development. The main
obstetric issues in SLE pregnancy are higher rates of
fetal loss, preterm birth, intrauterine growth
restriction, and neonatal lupus syndromes. However,
the rate of fetal loss has declined, and live births
rates of 80-90% have recently been reported. About
10-30% of SLE pregnancies are complicated with
fetal growth restriction and small for gestational age
babies. Active disease and lupus nephritis increase
the risk of fetal loss and other adverse outcomes.
Proteinuria, hypertension, thrombocytopenia, and
the presence of anti-phospholipid antibodies are
other negative predictors for fetal survival.
4 CONCLUSION
Here we report a case about SLE on pregnancy in an
18 years old woman. Pregnancy can trigger the
recurrence of SLE or aggravate the symptom and
relate to maternal and fetal mortality and morbidity.
The treatment needs a multidisciplinary approach;
maternal and fetal close monitoring is essential for
optimal outcomes.
ICTROMI 2019 - The 2nd International Conference on Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease
414
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