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母乳喂养、妊娠、药物、神经发育和人口数据库:信息荒漠。

Breastfeeding, pregnancy, medicines, neurodevelopment, and population databases: the information desert.

机构信息

Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Science, Swansea University, Swansea, Wales, UK.

Division of Neuroscience and Experimental Psychology, School of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.

出版信息

Int Breastfeed J. 2022 Aug 2;17(1):55. doi: 10.1186/s13006-022-00494-5.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The pharmacoepidemiology of the long-term benefits and harms of medicines in pregnancy and breastfeeding has received little attention. The impact of maternal medicines on children is increasingly recognised as a source of avoidable harm. The focus of attention has expanded from congenital anomalies to include less visible, but equally important, outcomes, including cognition, neurodevelopmental disorders, educational performance, and childhood ill-health. Breastfeeding, whether as a source of medicine exposure, a mitigator of adverse effects or as an outcome, has been all but ignored in pharmacoepidemiology and pharmacovigilance: a significant 'blind spot'.

WHOLE-POPULATION DATA ON BREASTFEEDING: WHY WE NEED THEM: Optimal child development and maternal health necessitate breastfeeding, yet little information exists to guide families regarding the safety of medicine use during lactation. Breastfeeding initiation or success may be altered by medicine use, and breastfeeding may obscure the true relationship between medicine exposure during pregnancy and developmental outcomes. Absent or poorly standardised recording of breastfeeding in most population databases hampers analysis and understanding of the complex relationships between medicine, pregnancy, breastfeeding and infant and maternal health. The purpose of this paper is to present the arguments for breastfeeding to be included alongside medicine use and neurodevelopmental outcomes in whole-population database investigations of the harms and benefits of medicines during pregnancy, the puerperium and postnatal period. We review: 1) the current situation, 2) how these complexities might be accommodated in pharmacoepidemiological models, using antidepressants and antiepileptics as examples; 3) the challenges in obtaining comprehensive data.

CONCLUSIONS

The scarcity of whole-population data and the complexities of the inter-relationships between breastfeeding, medicines, co-exposures and infant outcomes are significant barriers to full characterisation of the benefits and harms of medicines during pregnancy and breastfeeding. This makes it difficult to answer the questions: 'is it safe to breastfeed whilst taking this medicine', and 'will this medicine interfere with breastfeeding and/ or infants' development'?

摘要

背景

在妊娠和哺乳期药物的长期益处和危害的药物流行病学方面,人们关注甚少。人们越来越认识到母体药物对儿童的影响是可避免的危害源。关注焦点已从先天畸形扩展到包括不太明显但同样重要的结果,包括认知、神经发育障碍、教育表现和儿童健康不良。母乳喂养,无论是作为药物暴露的来源、减轻不良影响的因素还是作为结果,在药物流行病学和药物警戒中几乎被忽视:这是一个重大的“盲点”。

关于母乳喂养的全人群数据

我们为何需要这些数据:为了实现儿童的最佳发育和母亲的健康,母乳喂养是必要的,但关于哺乳期药物使用安全性的信息很少。药物使用可能会改变母乳喂养的开始或成功,母乳喂养可能会掩盖妊娠期间药物暴露与发育结果之间的真实关系。大多数人群数据库中母乳喂养的记录缺失或标准化程度低,阻碍了对药物、妊娠、母乳喂养以及母婴健康之间复杂关系的分析和理解。本文旨在提出在妊娠、产褥期和产后期间,将母乳喂养与药物使用和神经发育结果一起纳入全人群数据库研究药物危害和益处的论点。我们综述了:1)当前情况;2)如何使用抗抑郁药和抗癫痫药等示例,在药物流行病学模型中适应这些复杂性;3)获取全面数据的挑战。

结论

全人群数据的稀缺性以及母乳喂养、药物、共同暴露和婴儿结果之间相互关系的复杂性,是充分描述妊娠和哺乳期药物的益处和危害的重大障碍。这使得回答以下问题变得困难:“服用这种药物时是否可以安全母乳喂养”,以及“这种药物会干扰母乳喂养和/或婴儿的发育吗?”

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/bc86/9344686/a34596e83e2b/13006_2022_494_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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