What is this project about? This project aims to better understand how the immune system develops in babies whose mothers received immunomodulatory treatments during pregnancy. These treatments are necessary for women with autoimmune, inflammatory, allergic, or cancer-related diseases who cannot stop their medication while pregnant. Why is it important? Although these treatments help keep the mother and baby healthy, some medications can cross the placenta and affect the baby's immune system. Since pregnant women are usually not included in clinical trials, the investigators still don't know exactly how these drugs might influence the baby's immune development. How will the investigators do it? The investigators will follow a group of pregnant women receiving these treatments and monitor their babies at birth, and at 3, 6, and 12 months. The study will take place in three leading hospitals in Spain: Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, Hospital Clínic, and Vall d'Hebron. The investigators will also use organoid models in the lab to better understand how these drugs affect fetal development. Who will benefit? This study will help parents concerned about the impact of treatments during pregnancy on their child's health. It will also give doctors the evidence they need to make safer treatment decisions, and support the creation of new clinical guidelines to protect both mothers and babies.
The use of immunomodulatory drugs (IMD) in chronic inflammatory or oncologic diseases is increasingly widespread in pregnant women who have gestational desire and need to keep their disease under control for the safety of pregnancy. General objective: analyze the safety of IMD exposure during pregnancy used in clinical practice on the development of the newborn immune system. Specific objectives: 1) To evaluate lymphoid organogenesis, including regulatory T/B populations, and the direct effect on the drug target immune pathway, in cord and peripheral blood of newborns exposed in utero to biologic immunomodulators (bIMD, monoclonals and fusion protein); 2) To evaluate the epigenetic fingerprint in cord and peripheral blood of newborns exposed in utero to bIMD; 3) To develop an in vitro model (organoid-platform) to study the impact of IMD and maternal disease in the fetal period. 4) To develop a guide of specific recommendations, which includes the perspective of the newborn. Methods: Observational multicenter prospective cohort study of infants exposed to bIMD during pregnancy, born to mothers with chronic inflammatory or oncologic diseases. Clinical and analytical follow-up, from birth, at 3,6 and 12 months. Clinical: general health status, data on infections or autoimmune or allergic events. Analytical: serum levels of bIMD, maturation and function of T and B extended lymphocyte populations, integrity of the bIMD target pathway, study of epigenetic changes. The results will be compared with a control population. In vitro study: organoid-based models obtained from hiPSCs differentiated towards hematopoietic components; B-cell maturation will be evaluated after different IMD exposure. The investigators expect to: 1) surmount the knowledge gap on the impact of in utero IMD exposure, to define the newborn infectious risk, of autoimmunity and/or allergy, and 2) to be create and disseminate protocols of follow-up specific to them.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
90
non-intervention. Drug used in clinical practice as per practitioner decision
Hospital Sant Joan de Déu
Esplugues de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain
RECRUITINGHospital Clínic de Barcelona
Barcelona, Spain
RECRUITINGHospital Universitari Vall d'Hebrón
Barcelona, Spain
RECRUITINGGrowth
Growth will be measured with OMS scale. The World Health Organization (WHO) Child Growth Standards (0-5 years) and WHO Growth Reference (5-19 years) use Z-scores to assess growth, typically ranging from -6 to +6, with most values between -3 and +3. Higher scores indicate greater body size, which can mean better growth (e.g., height-for-age) or a worse outcome (e.g., overweight or obesity in BMI-for-age), depending on the growth index used.
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Neurodevelopment
Neurodevelopment will be measured with Haizea-Llevant scale. The Haizea-Llevant scale is a standardized tool used in Spain to assess neurodevelopment in children aged 0 to 5 years, based on the Denver Developmental Screening Test. It evaluates development across four domains, and scores are reported as age of acquisition of milestones or percentile ranges, with higher scores indicating better neurodevelopmental outcomes; there is no fixed minimum or maximum, as it depends on age-specific milestones. A child scoring below the 3rd percentile in one or more areas may indicate developmental delay and require further evaluation.
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Infection history
Number and type of infections will be recorded
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Vaccine response
IgG responses to tetanus, diphtheria and pneumococcus
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Hypersensitivity
Atopy, food allergy will be recorded. Atopy and food allergy will be assessed based on clinical history obtained through structured clinical interview and findings from physical examination, following standard diagnostic criteria. No specific questionnaire or scale will be used, as data will be collected descriptively during routine clinical evaluation.
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Immune Profiling in neonatal samples: Spectral flow cytometry
Investigators will perform a comprehensive immune cell phenotype (T/B/NK cells, T and B regulatory subsets) from cord and peripheral blood samples and evaluate de % of each cell type to be compared to age-matched healthy controls reference values
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Immune Profiling in neonatal samples: T cell function
Investigators will evaluate T cell response to stimulants (PHA, PWM, ConA) and calculate the proliferation capacity in % compared to age-matched healthy controls.
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Immune Profiling in neonatal samples: B cell function
Investigators will evaluate B cell function by performing Plasmablast differentiation and measuring immunoglobulin production (IgG, IgA, IgM).
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Immune Profiling in neonatal samples: Cytokine profiling
Investigators will perform a 92-cytokine panel (Olink platform, advanced PCR technology) to measure different cytokine abundance in serum samples
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Immune Profiling in neonatal samples: IMD Monitoring
Investigators will perform an ELISA-based maternal/neonatal IMD (immunomodulatory drug) concentration analysis to measure drug levels in serum samples
Time frame: first 12 months of age
Immune Profiling in neonatal samples: Vaccine responses
Investigators will measure Antibody titers for tetanus, diphtheria, pneumococcus using commercial kits. à afegeix (IgG) despres de antibody titers.
Time frame: first 12 months of age
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