Saturday, July 9, 2011

PRESCRIBING IN PREGNANCY

The prescription of drugs to a pregnant woman is a balance between possible adverse drug effects on the fetus and the risk to mother and fetus of leaving maternal disease inadequately treated. Effects on the human fetus cannot be reliably predicted from animal studies – hence one should prescribe drugs for which there is experience of safety over many years in preference to new or untried drugs. The smallest effective dose should be used. The fetus is most sensitive to adverse drug effects during the first trimester. It has been estimated that nearly half of all pregnancies in the UK are unplanned, and that most women do not present to a doctor until five to seven weeks after conception. Thus, sexually active women of childbearing potential should be assumed to be pregnant until it has been proved otherwise.

Delayed toxicity is a sinister problem (e.g. diethylstilbestrol) and if the teratogenic effect of thalidomide had not produced such an unusual congenital abnormality, namely phocomelia, its detection might have been delayed further. If drugs (or envi-ronmental toxins) have more subtle effects on the fetus (e.g. a minor reduction in intelligence) or cause an increased incidence of a common disease (e.g. atopy), these effects may never be detected. Many publications demand careful prospective controlled clinical trials, but the ethics and practicalities of such studies often make their demands unrealistic. A more rational approach is for drug regulatory bodies, the pharmaceutical industry and drug information agencies to collaborate closely and internationally to collate all information concerning drug use in pregnancy (whether inadvertent or planned) and associate these with outcome. This will require significant investment of time and money, as well as considerable encouragement to doctors and midwives to complete the endless forms.

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