Hansen Craig, Andrade Susan E, Freiman Heather, Dublin Sascha, Haffenreffer Katie, Cooper William O, Cheetham T Craig, Toh Sengwee, Li De-Kun, Raebel Marsha A, Kuntz Jennifer L, Perrin Nancy, Rosales A Gabriela, Carter Shelley, Pawloski Pamala A, Maloney Elizabeth M, Graham David J, Sahin Leyla, Scott Pamela E, Yap John, Davis Robert
Center for Clinical and Outcomes Research, Kaiser Permanente Georgia, Atlanta, GA, USA.
South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2016 Feb;25(2):170-8. doi: 10.1002/pds.3919. Epub 2015 Nov 24.
Sulfonamide antibacterials are widely used in pregnancy, but evidence about their safety is mixed. The objective of this study was to assess the association between first-trimester sulfonamide exposure and risk of specific congenital malformations.
Mother-infant pairs were selected from a cohort of 1.2 million live-born deliveries (2001-2008) at 11 US health plans comprising the Medication Exposure in Pregnancy Risk Evaluation Program. Mothers with first-trimester trimethoprim-sulfonamide (TMP-SUL) exposures were randomly matched 1:1 to (i) a primary comparison group (mothers exposed to penicillins and/or cephalosporins) and (ii) a secondary comparison group (mothers with no dispensing of an antibacterial, antiprotozoal, or antimalarial medication during the same time period). The outcomes were cardiovascular abnormalities, cleft palate/lip, clubfoot, and urinary tract abnormalities.
We first identified 7615 infants in the TMP-SUL exposure group, of which 7595 (99%) were exposed to a combination of TMP-SUL and the remaining 1% to sulfonamides alone. After matching (1:1) to the comparator groups and only including those with complete data on covariates, there were 20 064 (n = 6688 per group) in the primary analyses. Overall, cardiovascular defects (1.52%) were the most common and cleft lip/palate (0.10%) the least common that were evaluated. Compared with penicillin/cephalosporin exposure, and no antibacterial exposure, TMP-SUL exposure was not associated with statistically significant elevated risks for cardiovascular, cleft lip/palate, clubfoot, or urinary system defects.
First-trimester TMP-SUL exposure was not associated with a higher risk of the congenital anomalies studied, compared with exposure to penicillins and/or cephalosporins, or no exposure to antibacterials.
磺胺类抗菌药物在孕期广泛使用,但关于其安全性的证据不一。本研究的目的是评估孕早期暴露于磺胺类药物与特定先天性畸形风险之间的关联。
母婴对选自美国11个健康计划的120万例活产队列(2001 - 2008年),该队列构成了孕期用药暴露风险评估项目。孕早期暴露于甲氧苄啶 - 磺胺(TMP - SUL)的母亲按1:1随机匹配至(i)主要对照组(暴露于青霉素和/或头孢菌素的母亲)和(ii)次要对照组(同期未配用抗菌、抗原虫或抗疟疾药物的母亲)。结局指标为心血管异常、唇腭裂、马蹄内翻足和泌尿系统异常。
我们首先在TMP - SUL暴露组中识别出7615例婴儿,其中7595例(99%)暴露于TMP - SUL组合,其余1%仅暴露于磺胺类药物。在与对照组进行1:1匹配并仅纳入协变量数据完整的个体后,主要分析中有20064例(每组n = 6688例)。总体而言,所评估的心血管缺陷(1.52%)最为常见,唇腭裂(0.10%)最不常见。与暴露于青霉素/头孢菌素以及未暴露于抗菌药物相比,TMP - SUL暴露与心血管、唇腭裂、马蹄内翻足或泌尿系统缺陷的统计学显著升高风险无关。
与暴露于青霉素和/或头孢菌素或未暴露于抗菌药物相比,孕早期暴露于TMP - SUL与所研究的先天性异常风险升高无关。