Mycophenolic acid [MPA] is a powerful inhibitor of lymphocyte proliferation. Although this drug has been used across the globe for various maternal comorbidities, multiple concerns have been raised regarding its teratogenic effects. The Food and Drug Administration has changed its category to drug category D (evidence of fetal risk) in 2007. A wide range of congenital malformations in infants born to a mother using this medication have been described in the literature, but there is no specific set pattern of these malformations. We report a case of a female infant who had exposure to mycophenolate by maternal use during the initial phase of 1st trimester of her pregnancy and ended up having multiple congenital malformations. She was managed with multidisciplinary approach and was finally discharged home on respiratory support, after two months of hospital stay. The fact that our patient shared a pattern of congenital malformations with other reported cases who were exposed to mycophenolate in utero strongly suggests that mycophenolate had a causal role and that there might be an emerging fetal mycophenolate mofetil syndrome (FMMS).
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