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前瞻性妊娠队列中根据孕前肥胖状况使用产前药物。

Prenatal medication use in a prospective pregnancy cohort by pre-pregnancy obesity status.

机构信息

Epidemiology Branch, Division of Intramural Population Health Research, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.

Biostatistics and Bioinformatics Branch, Division of Intramural Population Health Research, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.

出版信息

J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med. 2022 Dec;35(25):5799-5806. doi: 10.1080/14767058.2021.1893296. Epub 2021 Mar 11.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The association between obesity (body mass index (BMI) ≥ 30 kg/m) and pattern of medication use during pregnancy in the United States is not well-studied. Higher pre-pregnancy BMI may be associated with increases or decreases in medication use across pregnancy as symptoms (e.g. reflux) or comorbidities (e.g. gestational diabetes) requiring treatment that may be associated with higher BMI could also change with advancing gestation.

OBJECTIVES

To determine whether prenatal medication use, by the number and types of medications, varies by pre-pregnancy obesity status.

METHODS

In a secondary data analysis of a racially/ethnically diverse prospective cohort of pregnant women with low risk for fetal abnormalities enrolled in the first trimester of pregnancy and followed to delivery (singleton, 12 United States clinical sites), free text medication data were obtained at enrollment and up to five follow-up visits and abstracted from medical records at delivery.

RESULTS

In 436 women with obesity and 1750 women without obesity (pre-pregnancy BMI, 19-29.9 kg/m), more than 70% of pregnant women (77% of women with and 73% of women without obesity) reported taking at least one medication during pregnancy, respectively (adjusted risk ratio (aRR)=1.10, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.01, 1.20), with 81% reporting two and 69% reporting three or more. A total of 17 classes of medications were identified. Among medication classes consumed by at least 5% of all women, the only class that differed between women with and without obesity was hormones and synthetic substitutes (including steroids, progesterone, diabetes, and thyroid medications) in which women with obesity took more medications (11 vs. 5%, aRR = 1.9, 95% CI = 1.38, 2.61) compared to women without obesity. Within this class, a higher percentage of women with obesity took diabetes medications (2.3 vs. 0.7%) and progesterone (3.4 vs. 1.3%) than their non-obese counterparts. Similar percentages of women with and without obesity reported consuming medications in the remaining medication classes including central nervous system agents (50 and 46%), gastrointestinal drugs (43 and 40%), anti-infective agents (23 and 21%), antihistamines (20 and 17%), autonomic drugs (10 and 9%), and respiratory tract agents (7 and 6%), respectively ( > 0.05 for all adjusted comparisons). There were no differences in medication use by obesity status across gestation. Since the study exclusion criteria limited the non-obese group to women without thyroid disease, in a sensitivity analysis we excluded all women who reported thyroid medication intake and still a higher proportion of women with obesity took the hormones and synthetic substitutes class compared to women without obesity.

CONCLUSION

Our findings suggest that pre-pregnancy obesity in otherwise healthy women is associated with a higher use of only selected medications (such as diabetes medications and progesterone) during pregnancy, while the intake of other more common medication types such as analgesics, antibiotics, and antacids does not vary by pre-pregnancy obesity status. As medication safety information for prenatal consumption is insufficient for many medications, these findings highlight the need for a more in-depth examination of factors associated with prenatal medication use.

摘要

背景

在美国,肥胖(体重指数(BMI)≥30kg/m²)与怀孕期间用药模式之间的关联尚未得到充分研究。较高的孕前 BMI 可能与怀孕期间药物使用的增加或减少有关,因为症状(例如反流)或合并症(例如妊娠期糖尿病)需要治疗,这些可能与较高的 BMI 相关,也可能随着妊娠的进展而发生变化。

目的

确定产前药物使用的数量和类型是否因孕前肥胖状况而异。

方法

在一项对低胎儿畸形风险的、种族/民族多样化的孕妇进行的二次数据分析中,这些孕妇在妊娠早期入组并随访至分娩(单胎,12 个美国临床站点),在入组时和最多五次随访时获得了自由文本药物数据,并从分娩时的病历中提取。

结果

在 436 名肥胖孕妇和 1750 名非肥胖孕妇(孕前 BMI,19-29.9kg/m²)中,分别有超过 70%(分别为 77%的肥胖孕妇和 73%的非肥胖孕妇)报告在怀孕期间至少服用了一种药物(调整风险比[aRR]=1.10,95%置信区间[CI]为 1.01-1.20),81%报告服用了两种药物,69%报告服用了三种或三种以上药物。共确定了 17 类药物。在所有女性中至少有 5%服用的药物类别中,肥胖女性和非肥胖女性之间唯一不同的是激素和合成替代品(包括类固醇、孕激素、糖尿病和甲状腺药物),肥胖女性服用的药物更多(11%对 5%,aRR=1.9,95%CI=1.38-2.61)与非肥胖女性相比。在这个类别中,肥胖女性服用糖尿病药物(2.3%对 0.7%)和孕激素(3.4%对 1.3%)的比例高于非肥胖女性。肥胖女性和非肥胖女性报告服用其余药物类别的药物的比例相似,包括中枢神经系统药物(50%和 46%)、胃肠道药物(43%和 40%)、抗感染药物(23%和 21%)、抗组胺药(20%和 17%)、自主神经药物(10%和 9%)和呼吸道药物(7%和 6%)(所有调整后比较均>0.05)。肥胖状况与妊娠期间的药物使用无差异。由于研究排除标准将非肥胖组限制为没有甲状腺疾病的女性,在敏感性分析中,我们排除了所有报告甲状腺药物摄入的女性,仍然有更高比例的肥胖女性服用激素和合成替代品类药物,而不是非肥胖女性。

结论

我们的研究结果表明,在其他方面健康的肥胖女性中,孕前肥胖与怀孕期间更特定药物(如糖尿病药物和孕激素)的使用增加有关,而其他更常见的药物类型(如镇痛药、抗生素和抗酸剂)的使用则不受孕前肥胖状况的影响。由于许多药物的产前使用安全性信息不足,这些发现突出表明需要更深入地研究与产前药物使用相关的因素。

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Prenatal medication use in a prospective pregnancy cohort by pre-pregnancy obesity status.前瞻性妊娠队列中根据孕前肥胖状况使用产前药物。
J Matern Fetal Neonatal Med. 2022 Dec;35(25):5799-5806. doi: 10.1080/14767058.2021.1893296. Epub 2021 Mar 11.
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