Multiple Sclerosis and Pregnancy Concerns May Stop Women From Getting Needed Medications

Even though the vast majority of people with multiple sclerosis are female, women are far less likely than men with this condition to receive medications that can relieve symptoms or slow disease progression, a new study suggests.

Researchers examined more than a decade of data on nearly 23,000 people with MS who were between 18 and 40 years old. Participants were 29 years old on average at diagnosis, and roughly 3 in 4 were women.

Compared with the men in the study, women were 8 percent less likely to receive disease-modifying drugs to manage symptoms and 20 percent less likely to get newer medications that are highly effective at reducing multiple sclerosis relapses, according to findings published in the journal Neurology.

“This is extremely alarming,” says Ann Marie Murray, MD, a professor and the chief of comprehensive movement disorders at the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute at West Virginia University in Morgantown.

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