Jansson Lauren M, Velez Martha L, McConnell Krystle, Spencer Nancy, Tuten Michelle, Jones Hendree, Rios Rebeca, King Van L, Gandotra Neeraj, Millio Lorraine, DiPietro Janet A
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017 Nov 1;180:56-61. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.08.001. Epub 2017 Aug 31.
Maternal buprenorphine maintenance predisposes the infant to exhibit neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS), but there is insufficient published information regarding the nature of NAS and factors that contribute to its severity in buprenorphine-exposed infants.
The present study evaluated forty-one infants of buprenorphine-maintained women in comprehensive substance use disorder treatment who participated in an open-label study examining the effects of maternal buprenorphine maintenance on infant outcomes. Modifiers of the infant outcomes, including maternal treatment and substance use disorder parameters, were also evaluated.
Fifty-nine percent of offspring exhibited NAS that required pharmacologic management. Both maternal buprenorphine dose as well as prenatal polysubstance exposure to illicit substance use/licit substance misuse were independently associated with NAS expression. Polysubstance exposure was associated with more severe NAS expression after controlling for the effects of buprenorphine dose. Other exposures, including cigarette smoking and SRI use, were not related to outcomes. Maternal buprenorphine dose was positively associated with lower birth weight and length.
Polysubstance exposure was the most potent predictor of NAS severity in this sample of buprenorphine-exposed neonates. This finding suggests the need for interventions that reduce maternal polysubstance use during medication assisted treatment for opioid use disorder, and highlights the necessity of a comprehensive approach, beyond buprenorphine treatment alone, for the optimal care for pregnant women with opioid use disorders.
母亲使用丁丙诺啡维持治疗会使婴儿易患新生儿戒断综合征(NAS),但关于NAS的性质以及导致丁丙诺啡暴露婴儿NAS严重程度的因素,公开信息不足。
本研究评估了41名在综合物质使用障碍治疗中使用丁丙诺啡维持治疗的女性所生的婴儿,这些婴儿参与了一项开放标签研究,该研究考察母亲使用丁丙诺啡维持治疗对婴儿结局的影响。还评估了婴儿结局的调节因素,包括母亲治疗和物质使用障碍参数。
59%的后代出现了需要药物治疗的NAS。母亲的丁丙诺啡剂量以及产前多物质暴露(非法物质使用/合法物质滥用)均与NAS的表现独立相关。在控制丁丙诺啡剂量的影响后,多物质暴露与更严重的NAS表现相关。其他暴露,包括吸烟和使用选择性5-羟色胺再摄取抑制剂(SRI),与结局无关。母亲的丁丙诺啡剂量与较低的出生体重和身长呈正相关。
在这个丁丙诺啡暴露新生儿样本中,多物质暴露是NAS严重程度的最有力预测因素。这一发现表明,需要采取干预措施减少母亲在阿片类物质使用障碍药物辅助治疗期间的多物质使用,并强调了除丁丙诺啡治疗外,采取综合方法对患有阿片类物质使用障碍的孕妇进行最佳护理的必要性。