Objective: To evaluate treatment and outcome of 17 pregnancies in nine patients with essential thrombocythaemia (ET) seen at our institution from 1988 to 1998.
Methods: Treatment and outcome of 17 pregnancies in nine ET patients were retrospectively analyzed.
Results: Seventeen pregnancies in nine patients with ET resulted in 11 (65%) live births and ended in six (35%) spontaneous abortions. Abortion could not be predicted from ET-associated complications before (p= 0.23) or during (p = 0.39) pregnancy. Maternal complications occurred during six pregnancies (35%): Three major bleedings in two patients with an acquired von Willebrand disease and two minor bleedings in patients treated with low-dose acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) were observed during pregnancy or at term; one patient suffered from transient visual loss while pausing low-dose ASA. Platelet counts prior to pregnancy were significantly higher as compared to the platelet nadir observed during pregnancy (p = 0.0017). Postpartum clinical course was uneventful in all patients. No specific treatment was given during 11 pregnancies. Six women received low-dose ASA during pregnancy followed by low-molecular-weight heparin until the end of the sixth week postpartum in five cases. This treatment was correlated with a favourable outcome (live birth versus abortion) when compared to no treatment (p=0.04).
Conclusion: Pregnancy in ET can be complicated by first trimester abortion and/or maternal haemorrhage. Our limited observation suggest a positive impact of low-dose ASA during pregnancy followed by low-molecular-weight heparin postpartum on pregnancy outcome in ET; nevertheless, confirmation by prospective documentation is mandatory.