Brent Robert L
Research Department, Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, Delaware 19899, USA.
Birth Defects Res A Clin Mol Teratol. 2005 Nov;73(11):906-18. doi: 10.1002/bdra.20184.
In the late 1960s and 1970s, a number of epidemiological studies were published indicating that pregnant women who were exposed to an array of sex steroids delivered infants with an increased incidence of nongenital congenital malformations. Because of these publications, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), in conjunction with various pharmaceutical companies, labeled the therapeutic exposure of progestational drugs and contraceptives in pregnant women as a risk factor for limb-reduction defects (LRDs) and congenital heart defects (CHDs). Subsequently there was a rapid decrease in the exposure of pregnant women to these drugs and the initiation of numerous lawsuits alleging that a particular progestational drug was responsible for a child's nongenital congenital malformation. Wilson and Brent (1981) published an article indicating that epidemiological and animal studies of these drugs, and basic science did not support the package insert's warnings. Many new and previous animal and epidemiological studies did not support the FDA box warning. In 1987 the FDA held a hearing in which the FDA, the Teratology Society, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and other organizations supported the position that progestational agents did not result in nongenital malformations. An editorial appeared in Teratology congratulating the FDA for removing the warning label on oral contraceptives regarding nongenital malformations. In 1999 the FDA published new wording for package inserts that removed warnings for nongenital malformations for all progestational agents. In spite of the recent changes in the package inserts, lawsuits have alleged that progestational drugs cause nongenital malformations. It took 22 years from the time a box warning was required by the FDA until the warnings were removed in 1999. The 1999 FDA publication, which is a scholarly and objective document, should put an end to 2 decades of concern and anxiety for pregnant women or women of reproductive age. Could scientists, the pharmaceutical companies, or the FDA have prevented the mislabeling of progestational drugs with regard to their teratogenic risks? Was the epidemiological or teratology community at fault because they did not critique and respond to the early publications? Did the FDA act too slowly? The epidemiologic analyses, animal studies, and basic science principles have been reviewed, and it is obvious that clinically utilized progestational drugs do not cause nongenital malformations (i.e., LRDs and CHDs).
在20世纪60年代末和70年代,发表了多项流行病学研究,表明接触一系列性类固醇的孕妇所分娩婴儿的非生殖器先天性畸形发病率有所增加。由于这些出版物,美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)与多家制药公司联合,将孕妇治疗性使用孕激素药物和避孕药标记为肢体减少缺陷(LRD)和先天性心脏病(CHD)的风险因素。随后,孕妇对这些药物的接触迅速减少,并引发了大量诉讼,指控某种特定的孕激素药物导致儿童非生殖器先天性畸形。威尔逊和布伦特(1981年)发表了一篇文章,指出对这些药物的流行病学和动物研究以及基础科学并不支持药品说明书中的警告。许多新的和以前的动物及流行病学研究都不支持FDA的黑框警告。1987年,FDA举行了一次听证会,FDA、致畸学协会、疾病控制与预防中心、美国妇产科学会及其他组织都支持孕激素制剂不会导致非生殖器畸形这一观点。《致畸学》杂志发表了一篇社论,祝贺FDA取消了口服避孕药关于非生殖器畸形的警告标签。1999年,FDA公布了药品说明书的新措辞,取消了所有孕激素制剂关于非生殖器畸形的警告。尽管药品说明书最近有了这些变化,但仍有诉讼称孕激素药物会导致非生殖器畸形。从FDA要求加黑框警告到1999年取消警告,历时22年。1999年FDA的出版物是一份学术性和客观性的文件,应该结束孕妇或育龄妇女长达20年的担忧和焦虑。科学家、制药公司或FDA能否预防孕激素药物致畸风险方面的错误标注?流行病学或致畸学领域是否有过错,因为他们没有对早期出版物进行批评和回应?FDA行动是否过于迟缓?对流行病学分析、动物研究和基础科学原理进行了审查,很明显临床使用的孕激素药物不会导致非生殖器畸形(即LRD和CHD)。