Giving birth and raising a family. For many people with MS, the path to achieving those goals contains more questions than answers. Questions about timing — which should come first, pregnancy or disease stability on a DMT? Questions about genetics — can MS be passed on to the baby? Questions about fertility — is in vitro fertilization safe and effective, and how much does it increase disease activity? Questions their treating clinicians may not be able to answer with the most current research.
Join us as guest author Dr. Patricia Coyle from the Department of Neurology at the Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University in Stony Brook, New York, and Founder and Director of the Stony Brook Multiple Sclerosis Comprehensive Care Center provides the evidence-based answers to these and other questions in this issue of eMultipleSclerosis Review.
Define the issues specific to people of childbearing age with MS, such as the safety of various DMTs and the influence of pregnancy on MS activity.
Founder and Director, Stony Brook Multiple Sclerosis Comprehensive Care Center
Professor, Department of Neurology, Renaissance School of Medicine
Stony Brook University
Stony Brook, NY
Assistant Professor
Department of Neurology
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Baltimore, MD
Assistant Professor
Department of Neurology
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Baltimore, MD
Department of Neurology
Johns Hopkins Hospital
Baltimore, MD
0.5 hour Physicians
0.5 contact hour Nurses
Launch date: November 22, 2024
Expiration date: November 21, 2026